1 Kijabe Street - Former Globe Cinema next to Globe Roundabout, Nairobi. Helpline: 0729 243 699, 0712 586 367, 0700 391 485
Thursday, December 30, 2010
5 Steps to a GOOD START
Each of the first five books in the Bible carries a secret. Each secret shows how to start well and how to avoid starting badly.
Over five Sundays during the first month of 2011, you will learn these secrets and be equipped to ensure a GOOD START to your New Year.
More details at your local UCKG.
Monday, December 27, 2010
The Toolbox
A business man was a bit concerned about the future of his two children and how they would take care of the company that he worked so hard to build.
Then he took his two sons for a holiday on a farm where he had spent his childhood. After a long trip and the first night, he called his children to help him fix the barn in that farm.
He gave each one of them a toolbox. One of them was full of all kinds of tools and updated, the other one just had an old hammer, an old screwdriver and old pliers.
The work took a couple of days and each day the father changed the toolboxes. One day, one of the sons had the full one and on the other day the other son got it, until the end of the job.
When they ended the work, and they were rejoicing on the good job that they had done, the father called them and asked them when they felt more useful and why?
Their answer was: “When you gave us the toolbox that was full because everything that was needed was there, we were more active in movement. On the other hand, since the tools in the other box were
bad, we only could watch the work be done by the other - not by us.”
“The same is in our life.” – replied the father - “We are like a toolbox, we can be useful or not, it depends on us. The more things we know, learn and update or upgrade on, the more useful we will be
but if we don’t invest in ourselves, don’t learn or upgrade ourselves
with new ideas or things, we will watch others succeeding and doing
what we were supposed to do.”
Dear reader, maybe you say that you want to succeed in life, and want to be used by God. Let me tell you something, this depends on you, if you invest in yourself (toolbox) study, search to do better in
everything that you do, learn new things (ie. a new language,
courses). God will use you more and you will succeed, for sure.
“In a wealthy home some utensils are made of gold and silver, and some are made of wood and clay. The expensive utensils are used for special occasions, and the cheap
ones are for everyday use. If you keep yourself pure, you will be a
special utensil for honourable use. Your life will be clean, and you
will be ready for the Master to use you for every good work.” (2 Timothy 2:20-21 -NLT)
Be always the best, in Jesus name.
Monday, December 6, 2010
When you don’t use intelligent faith…
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Proud and Confident
He looked the man over from top to bottom and decided that the only way to ignore him would be to pray louder and show him that this was a temple, not a bar. ‘Oh My Lord, I praise You, not only for what You’ve been in my life but mostly because of what I’ve conquered for You. I have lived my life in the best way possible and I think I have done a very good job. You see Lord, I’m not sure if You have noticed but I don’t live life as most men my age do.
Take that man in the corner, for example … he must have done quite a few things wrong in his life, things I’m sure You disapprove of … whereas I, your faithful and reliable servant, come here not to ask You for forgiveness but to praise You with my life. I have an eye for perfection and I use that to guide my life. I can see how poor and needy that man is, which clearly shows that he hasn’t done his best. I can’t help but feel sorry for You, my Lord, for having to put up with such a pathetic creature. Amen.’
When we read this parable of our Lord Jesus, it seems so obvious that this “righteous” man has the wrong attitude. Yet haven’t you seen exactly the same disposition in many of us? Many of us like to boast about our accomplishments, saying “I am so good at that” or “What would the church be without me” … or the ultimate, “I wish everybody was just like me”, consequently making other people feel low and unworthy…
The more we do for God, the more the devil attacks us. One of his favorite methods is to give us a self-righteous point of view, so that we no longer see the plank in our own eye but only the speck in someone else’s. (Read Luke 6.42.) The truth is that no one is truly good. No one is high enough to say that he or she is better than others. We all have our shortcomings, but through faith we’ve been chosen to serve God as best we can, with whatever we have.
The smaller we seem before others, the bigger we are before God … the less capable, the more useful. “For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.” (Read Luke 18.9-14.)
Sunday, November 28, 2010
At least be useless
In the same way, you, when you have done all you were ordered to do, say: We are useless servants; we have only done what we were supposed to do. Luke 17.10
According to the Lord Jesus, the definition of useless is not someone who is idle or just sits around and does nothing all day. His take on it was that the useless person is the one who does only what he should have done — in other words, nothing extra, no more than what was expected of him.
Of course, the goal is to become a useful servant, someone who exceeds expectations. But we know such people are rare.
The problem is that there are too many people who need to improve a lot just to achieve "useless" status. That's because they don't do even what they are supposed to.
If you have no ambition to become a useful servant, then at least be useless. Less than that is to waste your existence.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
The size of faith
How can we measure faith? How big must my faith be in order for me to achieve my dreams or conquer the promises of God?
The Lord compared the size of faith to a mustard seed because, among the rabbis, the mustard seed was commonly used to illustrate something very small. The size of a mustard seed is about the diameter of human hair, but a mustard tree grows up to 5 meters tall.
An act of faith pleases God. When Jesus saw a widow place everything she had on the altar, He considered her offering more valuable than all the other offerings put together.
Quantity is not a synonym for quality - especially when it comes to faith. The rich people offered what had been leftover, which represented their "leftover" faith.
But the widow gave all she had. In other words, she deposited all her faith in God's provision; she would depend exclusively on the Almighty.
This is the quality of faith that draws God's attention and shows its size.
The size of our faith is directly related to how dedicated to God we are, because faith is an attitude of total dependence on God. The more we depend on Him, the bigger our faith is. The less we depend on Him, the smaller our faith is. Unbelief means independence from God. The more independent from God a person is, the more of an unbeliever he becomes.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Social Work - Kenya
Hope for Abandoned babies
At the Universal Church we have a group called Sisterhood, and today as part of our work, we went to visit a children’s home, and it was an awesome experience to all of us. We took some things to share with them like toys, gifts, snacks and drinks, and off course our love to bless their lives.
The children were so happy, it is amazing how with just a few we could do so much to them, end of the day I think we were the ones blessed by them. The smile on their faces was priceless, and we do believe soon we will be visiting them again that we may share and give what our Lord has given us.
Special thanks first to our Dear Lord Jesus, and to all those who sponsored this remarkable date.
Thank God for having touched the hearts of the organizers of this orphanage to help these children, May God enable them to help many other children as well. Very good job.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Ask Event - Kenya - Start Today!
Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, No. 1 Kijabe Street, Former Globe Cinema or Sabaki Centre opposite Shell Petrol Station, Mathare North.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Thinking BIG
"Ask of Me, and I will give you the nations for your inheritance, and the ends of the earth for your possession." Psalms 2:8
Thinking big, in a nutshell, is to think like God. God's thoughts are more than big. "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts," He said in Isaiah 55:9.
Man is limited only by his thoughts. And unfortunately, most people have been prisoners in the tiny prisons of their small thoughts.
You can only do what you think is possible. That's why people who think small, live small lives.
What is it to think small?
It's to think of what you don't have instead of what you do.
It's to think of what you can't do instead of what you can.
It's to think of a problem instead of a solution.
It's to think of what's going against you instead of what you've got going for you.
It's to think that you already have enough because there are people poorer than you.
It's to think that you've tried everything, when you've really only tried a handful of things.
It's to think that successful people are just ‘lucky' and that you aren't one of them.
It's to doubt you'll ever succeed and to believe you're destined to fail.
You can only do what you think is possible. Henry Ford said, "If you think you can or you think you can't, you will ALWAYS be right."
So when you catch yourself wondering why your life is the way it is, why it doesn't get better, the answer will inevitably come down to your thoughts.
To think big is to think like God. And to think like God, you need to know what and how He thinks. And to know what and how He thinks, meditate on what He said in His Word. Here's just one example:
"Ask of Me, and I will give you the nations for your inheritance, and the ends of the earth for your possession." Psalm 2:8
What was it again you asked Him the last time you prayed?
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Ask Event - Kenya
Gold from your enemies
1 And the LORD said to Moses, “I will bring yet one more plague on Pharaoh and on Egypt. Afterward he will let you go from here. When he lets you go, he will surely drive you out of here altogether.
2 “Speak now in the hearing of the people, and let every man ask from his neighbor and every woman from her neighbor, articles of silver and articles of gold.”
3 And the LORD gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians.
Nine plagues had already come upon the Egyptians. By this time, they knew exactly what was going on and who was behind it — the Israelites and their God!
Turning your neighbor’s rivers into blood, causing frogs to crawl up in their beds, and killing their cattle with hail, among others, weren’t exactly the top tips on how to make friends… There’s no doubt that by this time, the Egyptians hated the Israelites. They were sick of them.
And yet, here comes Moses with another one of his God’s brilliant ideas. Go ask your neighbors — that’s right, the Egyptians who hate you — to give you silver and gold. Give you, not sell to you.
What is God thinking? Does He want us to antagonize the Egyptians even more? Is He trying to get us all killed?
No. He was simply trying to teach His people how to use the power of asking. Notice that He was already planning on giving the Israelites favor in the eyes of the Egyptians. But the Israelites would only find that out if they went and asked them.
Lesson?
God wants us to have the courage, the brazen face to ask what we want even of those least likely to give us anything. In other words, if somebody has what you want, just go and ask. It doesn’t matter if he’s your enemy. And it doesn’t matter the size of your request either. Gold and silver? Of your enemy? Just ask!
We of course, with all our fears and shyness and other little monsters scaring us in our minds, wouldn’t dare ask such things even of our friends.
What is God thinking? That’s what I want to know.
And that’s how I want to think too.
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Two ways to Receive
In Matthew 7:7 Jesus said: “Ask and it will be given to you.” In Luke 6.38 He said: “Give and it will be given to you.” Okay, wait a minute. What must I do to receive something — ask or give?
Both.
The Lord Jesus gave us two parallel streets that lead to getting what we want. Ask Street is where our requests travel as they ride on prayer, perseverance, and faith in His promises. Give Street is where our requests travel secretly, wrapped in gifts. It’s like a limousine with dark tinted windows; you can’t see who’s inside, but you know it’s somebody important. Our gifts carry unspoken requests and announce their importance, and that’s why it’s a powerful way of asking.
Asking and Giving are two ways that lead us to Receiving. Each of them is powerful if used alone, in appropriate situations. If used together, they’re irresistible.
Jesus was teaching us that if we want to receive, we must not be ashamed of asking or afraid of giving. We need to overcome our laziness, doubts, and lack of faith to ask. And we need to overcome our stinginess in giving.
If we are brave enough to ask boldly and give generously, the only trouble we'll have will be finding room to put everything we will receive…
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
What I want is...
God must have been speaking through Mark Twain when he said the above. I’m sure that’s exactly how He feels about us many times. Can you say out loud what you really want? Yes, I mean right now, before you continue reading this?
“Well, er… sure… umm… where do I start? Umm…”
How many things do you want in one day? You want a better job in the morning, to lose weight at lunch, spend more time with your family in the afternoon, and pay off your debts in the evening. And you probably won’t have done a thing about any of those wants by the time you go to sleep. But you want them. Or so you think.
Moses spent 40 years in the desert as a fugitive of Egypt. If anybody asked him, on any day, if he wanted his people free from Egyptian slavery, he would have answered with an emphatic, almost angry, “Yes, of course!” But on the day God told him on Mount Sinai He was going to use him to do just that, Moses said, “Not me, Lord, please send somebody else.”
If you say you want something, then do what it takes to make it happen. Any less than that is self-delusion.
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Asking and Luck
We don’t know her name. She’s only referred to as the “Shunammite” — from a place called Shunem. She had hosted the prophet Elisha in her house many times and generously supported him.
Elisha learned from God that a famine was about to hit the land of Israel. Grateful for her kindness, he gave her the heads up and advised her to move with her family out of the country, somewhere where she would be safe and fully provided for.
So she did, and escaped the famine.
Seven years later, when the famine was over, she returned home — only to find someone else occupying her land. Homeless, the Shunammite tried all she could to get her property back, to no avail. Determined to fight for what was rightfully hers, she went all the way to the king to ask for justice.
This is where things get interesting.
By divine providence, while she made her way to the palace, the king took a sudden interest in Elisha’s miracles. He called in Elisha’s assistant, a young man called Gehazi, who started telling the king about all the miracles the man of God had done — including how he’d raised the Shunammite’s son from the dead. As the woman herself walked in, unaware of the conversation, Gehazi said to the king: “This is the woman, and this is her son whom Elisha brought back to life!”
The king assigned her an officer to ensure she would not only get her property back, but also all the profits her field had produced for the past seven years!
Luck? I don’t think so.
I think her decision to keep asking until she got what she wanted put her in the right place, at the right time.
Ask more, get more. It’s the power of asking.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Friday, August 20, 2010
When was the last time...
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Friday, August 6, 2010
Shame on you!
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Friday, July 30, 2010
Man up! (2)
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Life on the altar
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Your problem is God's problem
Friday, July 23, 2010
Being a male vs. Being a Man
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
To hell with doubts!
Like God, the devil also works with words; he uses words or thoughts of doubt that cause fear and worries. As a consequence, people become emotionally unstable and they become vulnerable to harm. It’s a recipe from hell to kill, to steal, and to destroy.
There’s no medicine that can neutralise these attacks, but we have to set our minds on God’s promises and react. React immediately in our mind, through thoughts that are based on the Word. Faith’s counterattack combined with a good dose of trust and perseverance will make the devil run. That’s what it means to submit to God and resist the devil (James 4:7).
Good music, wise advice, a word of comfort, entertainment, or anything else is like taking an aspirin. It sooths the pain, but it doesn’t solve the problem. We must use the same tactics our Lord used when He resisted Peter’s emotional “advice”, saying: “Get behind Me, Satan!” (Matthew 16:23).
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Malice
The source of a good life comes from pure thoughts, free of malice. Malice not only corrupts good faith, but is also responsible for the downfall of many Christians.
Lately, the love of most has been growing cold, not only towards others, but towards God. The type of love that the Bible is referring to is a love that comes from faith. This is what we see happening right now.
The quality of faith found in today's Christians is very similar to the faith of the Israelites in the days of Jeremiah. There is such inconsistency in the faith of people today, and all of this due to malicious desires.
I suggest that you meditate, not read but meditate, on the ninth chapter of Jeremiah. I would like to bring the following selection to your attention:
"My people [...] have bent their tongues for lies. They are not valiant for the truth on the earth. For they proceed from evil to evil, and they do not know Me,' says the LORD." (Jeremiah 9:3)
The force that drives a malicious "Christian" is his personal gain, not to honor the Lord Jesus, but to fight for his own personal interests. This gives birth to malice.
Therefore, "Everyone take heed to his neighbour, And do not trust any brother; for every brother will utterly supplant, and every neighbour will walk with slanderers. Everyone will deceive his neighbour, and will not speak the truth; they have taught their tongue to speak lies; they weary themselves to commit iniquity. Your dwelling place is in the midst of deceit; through deceit they refuse to know Me, says the LORD" (Jeremiah 9:4-6).
When the Spirit warns you of a bad conscience, it's actually warning you against the spirit of malice, so commonly found among the convinced but not converted. We must be vigilant at all times, not allowing malice to invade our hearts.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Acknowledgment Day – UCKG Anniversary, July 9th'
Time: July 9, 2010 at 6pm to July 10, 2010
Location: Worldwide
Organized By: UCKG
As The Universal Church celebrates its 33rd anniversary on July 9th, we are calling all pastors, assistants, staff, and church members to acknowledge what God has done in their lives.
Acknowledgment day will challenge us to look back on our journey with God and remember where He has rescued us from. It will be a day of worship and praise, of recognizing we are nothing without Him.
We hope you will come and join us. The Lord’s Supper will also be served.
Acknowledgment Day
Universal Church 33rd Anniversary
Friday, July 9th 6pm
Monday, June 28, 2010
Woe to you!
The ministry of Jesus was characterised by lessons of justice, attitudes of compassion, and acts of faith. But the religious oppression that hypocrites had imposed on His people revolted Him beyond measure. He was so disgusted that He spoke to them in a condemning and violent way, saying:
"Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you pay tithe of mint and anise and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faith. These you ought to have done, without leaving the others undone. Blind guides, who strain out a gnat and swallow a camel!"(Matthew 23:23,24)
Hypocrites can be characterised by their meticulousness. They pick on everyone and worry about every little thing, but in the end they neglect the things that are really important. They insist on pretending to be someone they are not. They like to demand from others what they themselves won't do.
It's interesting to note that in the Lord's speech, He judges them in advance. That is, they have already been condemned to the lake of fire and brimstone, along with the devil, demons, death, hell, the beast, the false prophet, and everyone else whose names are not written in the Book of Life. This is strong!
Friday, June 18, 2010
Strength in weakness
The Lord Jesus said that the first would be last and the last would be first, the older shall serve the younger and whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for His sake will find it.
Even the power of the Almighty is perfected in the weak. Paul noticed that his weaknesses were signs of his strength. During his moments of pain and sorrow he heard a gentle voice say: “My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.”
Assured by those words of faith, he then confessed, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12).
And so, because of his times of humiliation, Paul learned that whoever exalts himself will be humbled and whoever humbles himself will be exalted. In the Kingdom of God, whoever is eager to gain, ends up losing; and whoever is unafraid to lose, wins. It’s exactly the opposite of the rules of this world.
So, dear readers, if you’re feeling down, weak, humiliated or embarrassed, know that all these things are a sign of God’s strength perfecting you in your weakness. Raise your head high, dust off your shoulders and keep on going because God is with you.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Tunneling through the rock
There is a mine for silver and a place where gold is refined. Iron is taken from the earth, and copper is smelted from ore... Job 28:1-11
Someone asked me once, "You were preaching the Gospel in Europe before you moved to Africa. Which place was easier?"
The same question a few years ago would have gotten a different answer from me. However I said, "I don't believe there are easier or harder places to preach the Gospel. I believe that a man of God seeks from God and from himself the appropriate tools to win souls - whatever the circumstances."
But I don't think she understood me. And in case you don't either, let me call on my old friend Job to help me explain - not about preaching the Gospel to Europeans or Africans but about why the level of difficulty to achieve something doesn't really matter.
Read carefully the above verses from Job 28 so you can understand what I'm about to say.
Job starts by asserting, "There is a mine for silver, and place where gold is refined." Gold and silver here represent what you want to achieve. Just as there are mines for silver and a place where gold can be found, what you want also exists and has ‘a place." Like undiscovered gold, it's waiting there to be found and claimed.
What you want exists. It's not a dream, and it's not impossible. There is a place where it lies. You can find it somewhere.
It's important that you believe this because I've seen too many good people returning from their journey with their heads hanging and confessing "It's too difficult, I can't make it" - only to see someone else come up behind them shouting, "I did it"
Like gold and silver, good things exist but obviously require effort and determination to be found.
Job said that the miner, who knows the value of gold, "puts an end to the darkness; he searches the farthest recesses for ore in the blackest darkness... he cuts a shaft... his hand assaults the flinty rock and lays bare the roots of the mountains. He tunnels through the rock... he searches the sources of the rivers and brings hidden things to light."
There ain't nothing stopping him!
So I say there is no such thing as easier or harder. There is only what you want and what you must do to get it. What is in between is only a temporary delay.
Instead of spending your time deciding which obstacle is easier and which obstacle is harder, spend it finding the solution to the problem and how you're going to get rid of it. In other words, instead of magnifying the problem, refine the solution.
Difficult and easy are in your hands. Or should I say, in your head?
Quote:
"There is no such thing as easier or harder. There is only what you want and what you must do to get it."
Bishop Renato Cardoso
Monday, June 7, 2010
Like a woman in labour
Conceiving your dream
"I have held My peace a long time, I have been still and restrained Myself. Now I will cry like a woman in labor." Isaiah 42:14Anyone who has been close to a pregnant woman or who has experienced pregnancy for themselves knows that a pregnant woman does not behave normally. Her whole body is geared towards nourishing and protecting the growing child within her. Her sole preoccupation is to deliver this child into the world and into her arms - fit, healthy and well.
We should be in a similar state when we are "pregnant" with our dreams and goals. We have to nourish and protect the fragile dream growing within us.
The secret to receiving what you want is to become pregnant with your dream or idea in such a way that your sole preoccupation is in bringing this dream into existence. This process involves fighting our doubts and our fears.
A pregnant woman has to fight the doubts that her child might be born with some defect or health problem. In the same way we have to resist the doubts that something will go wrong with our idea or dream. We've got to ignore the (perhaps) well-intentioned advice we can get from others to just abort the idea.
One woman I know was told that the baby she carried had an 80% chance of being born with Down's Syndrome, and doctors recommended that she abort the child. She refused to listen to them. By her faith she told God that she knew that her child would be born healthy and she refused to kill the new life growing within her, seeing this as God's gift to her.
What was the outcome? Did this woman give birth to a child who would be a burden to her for the rest of her life? No, this woman's child was born perfectly healthy. She conquered her doubts by her faith and we need to do the same. When doubts assail us we need to fight back with faith, putting down the flaming arrows of the devil. It is now more than ever that we have to use the shield of faith to protect the yet unborn child within us.
Husbands, think. How would you behave if someone tried to attack your pregnant wife? You would jealously guard and protect her from all harm. So, we too need to jealously guard and protect the dreams within us, the dreams that we are pregnant with.
Pregnant women are well known for behaving irrationally and doing strange things, sometimes having bizarre cravings for unusual foods because they contain the necessary minerals and nutrients that the growing child requires. We too need to feed our idea - by faith.
Just as a pregnant woman visualizes a picture in her mind of one day holding her child in her arms and being rewarded for all the long months of painful waiting, we too need to visualize our own picture, the image of our dream in our mind, and not let go of it.
Pregnancy involves discomfort and inconvenience. Parts of a woman's body which would normally behave in one way, now behave in another - she cannot sleep at night, her appetite increases, her need for affection from her husband increases, her anticipation of the pain of childbirth increases.
All this because she is willing to carry and give birth to her child. She knows that the worst pain awaits her, the pain of childbirth. And yet she has the strength of mind to continue till the end, knowing that the pain will be forgotten when she holds her child for the first time. She draws strength from the faith that all will be well and that this day will come soon.
Take great care of the fragile dream growing within your heart. It is the Holy Spirit's gift to you - let it grow big and strong!
Fight the doubts.
Feed the baby.
Keep your dream in your mind!
Quote:
"Fight the doubts. Feed the baby."
Saturday, June 5, 2010
Reaction is everything
Who told them to worship the golden calf?" we might have asked if we had been there. "So, now let them face the consequences." This time the Israelites really seemed to have crossed the point of no return as far as God was concerned. God even said to Moses that He would destroy the people and then start a new nation out of him.
Moses' courageous intercession for the people was what saved the day - at least for a while. "Turn from your fierce anger; relent and do not bring disaster on your people," he prayed. That was enough for the Lord to spare the people from destruction.
But being Lord of all past, present and future, God knew that the people's rebellion against Him was far from over. So He told Moses He would no longer go with the people as He might kill them on the way because of their stubbornness. "I will send an angel before you," He said. The Scriptures describe how the people received the news:
"When the people heard these distressing words, they began to mourn and no one put on any ornaments."
It's interesting how the people's reaction was so different from Moses'. After Moses pronounced God's judgment upon them, they began to cry and took off their ornaments. Now this is not the right way to react to a distressing situation. Instead, Moses began to complain with the Lord and refused to accept His verdict. He went to the point of telling God he would rather die in the desert than to go on without His Presence.
In the end, Moses got exactly what he asked for: "I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you..." - said the Lord.
In other words, Moses, despite being the world's humblest man (see Numbers 12.3), reacted quickly and aggressively to God's decision to destroy the Israelites and to send an angel before them.
Sometimes this kind of reaction can make all the difference in life. Whether we are successful or defeated, take opportunities or lose them, get accepted or rejected - can all depend on reaction.
We can't always afford to think a situation over and over, or just let it be. Sometimes we need to react to it quickly firmly, and decisively.
There are many people in the church who are suffering from a terrible disease called passive faith. This disease makes their faith inactive, quiet, too patient - virtually worthless. The favorite expression of these sufferers is "I'm waiting on the Lord." They think they can just have faith in God and wait motionless for some lucky day when their situation will change. But it doesn't. Ever.
Such people never conquer or achieve anything, and usually they're the ones who are always complaining about their lives.
They have to realize that there is a time when we just have to say "Enough is enough!" There is a time when a man has to be a Man, and a woman must be a Woman, to make a decision about his or her life. Instead of mourning, thinking and asking questions, they should jump out of their inertia and actually USE their faith.
Dear friend, you cannot reap the fruit of your faith if you don't react strongly to the problems that are suffocating you. React quickly. React firmly.
React now. God will be pleased with you.
Quote:
"We can't always afford to think a situation over and over, or just let it be. Sometimes we need to react to it quickly firmly, and decisively."
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
God works in partnership with man
Twice a year, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God runs a Challenge of Faith, when we invite those who believe to use their faith and demand from God the fulfilment of His promises. As a result, they take possession of their dreams. It’s obvious that each person sacrifices according to his faith, and through this, we have seen extraordinary and wonderful things happen.
God inspires and gives us ideas; an idea given by the Holy Spirit that is put into practice works, for He works in partnership with those who are obedient.
Put sacrificial faith into practice and your miracle will happen.
Posted by Bishop Edir MacedoThursday, May 27, 2010
Mount Sinai
What profit is it to you if you save the whole world and lose your soul? You can even enjoy a comfortable life for awhile, but you will not enjoy it forever! Let’s invest in our soul and guarantee our eternal salvation. When we achieve this spiritual dream (the seal of God), all other dreams will eventually come true, naturally. It’s written:
“But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” (Matthew 6:33)
Many people make the, sometimes, fatal mistake: they ignore this piece of advice. They have focused their faith first on material and emotional blessings. They forget that a spiritual blessing is the foundation of all the other blessings. To fight for any dream before obtaining your spiritual blessing is like running after the wind. There are those who even succeed, but it doesn’t last for long and, as a result, they become frustrated.
“For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?” The wise wins souls. But first, he has to win his own soul.
If you haven’t had a personal experience with the Lord Jesus, then this should be your priority in the Challenge of Mount Sinai
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Why Mount Sinai?
Mount Sinai is a 7500 foot natural altar rising abruptly from the Egyptian desert, the highest mountain in its range.
Another name for Mt Sinai is Horeb, which means ‘waste’, and to this very day it remains mostly wilderness and desert with a very few Bedouins and shepherds living there.
Over 3000 years ago Hebrew slaves—the waste of Egypt—came and camped at the foot of Sinai after leaving their land of slavery.
At that time they were nothing but human waste: men, women, children, young and old—with backs scarred by the whips of their slave masters, calloused feet from years of standing knee-deep in mud to make bricks for pharaoh’s cities, old ragged clothes and eyes that had seen nothing but the horrible images of slavery from the day they were born.
But there, at the foot of this mountain, that people became a great nation! A group of disorderly slaves, they departed from Sinai with the Book of the Law that had been given to them by God Himself, with clear directions to the Promised Land. They were assured of God’s help and protection as they marched on, and at one point rose to be one of the most prosperous and feared nations on earth.
Therefore Mount Sinai is a symbol of victory, of rising from the ashes, of the impossible becoming possible, of the weak becoming strong. It’s where waste becomes wealth, and the forgotten are remembered. It is also a reminder that God sees and remembers His people, and does not leave them at the mercy of their oppressors.
Sinai is the only mountain on earth where God set His foot and decidedly changed the destiny of His people.
This is why we go there! When we are standing on the peak of that mountain, our faith is at its highest. All these facts come to life because we’re not just reading about Mount Sinai—it’s there before our very eyes!
And so this is why we encourage a challenge of faith on Mount Sinai once a year in our church. From the first time we did this in 1980, thousands of people have achieved great victories and given wonderful testimonies as a result of the prayers made on this mountain.
We go to Mount Sinai for great things. We go there to radically change lives. We go there to solve difficult situations.
We go to prove that our faith is genuine through sacrifice, and to receive the manifestation of God’s promises in our lives!
It’s a privilege to be part of this event. It is a blessing to take part in the Challenge of Mt Sinai.
Bishop Renato Cardoso