Archive for November, 2008

Nov 28 2008

Radio Antioch Audio Podcast Episode 6: Lessons from the Desert

Published by David Cranfill under Podcasts

Radio Antioch Podcast Graphic

Episode Six of the Radio Antioch podcast is a sermon by David Cranfill entitled Lessons from the Desert,  recorded at the second Live Radio Antioch meeting on November 1st, 2008. The Audio Podcast can accessed via this post or on Itunes. Video segments will also be posted on this blog in the next few days.

When the Children of Israel left Egypt they were little more than a rabble of slaves. As the Lord provided for them in the desert, He began to teach them to walk with Him and to depend upon Him daily.  There are many truths that we can learn from their time in the desert to enrich our lives today.

0:00    Intro
0:32    Leaving the Slave Mentality Behind
9:09    The Intentionality of God: Molding our identity in Christ
17:19  Microwave Manna: Exposing the Lie of Clergy and Laity
23:35  Older than the Law?
31:04  True Manna from Heaven
37:48  Credits

Click HERE to Listen Now!

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Nov 28 2008

Thanksgiving Thoughts

Published by David Cranfill under Commentary

Friends-

I have been enjoying a few days off here as we celebrate Thanksgiving. Have you noticed that it seems that America now goes straight from Halloween to Christmas? I guess that with the exception of the grocery stores, the merchants have little to sell you for thanksgiving, so they use this holiday to kick off the shopping madness for Christmas.
I for one am thoughtful and thankful this season. Instead of my usual picture in this post, I have included a cool Human Video that reminds us how Jesus cares for us as the world pulls at us with its temptations and deceptions. I also LOVE the soundtrack song. Jesus delivered me from some Very dark places, and has given me new life, and I give Him all honor and praise. Truly He is all I want, and all I need.

This is also a time for me to thank all those who make Radio Antioch possible. First, I want to thank our volunteers who help with the Live meetings, the worship, the audio and video production, and Christian Life Fellowship who lends us their building and much needed support. Thanks so much, guys. I also want to thank our online community, particularly those who contribute their comments and testimonies.

The comment below is from a preacher friend and mentor of mine from Texas, Roger Hill, who wrote this as a comment to our Podcast Episode 5. I think it is a perfect closing to our series on the life of Jacob, Wrestling with God.

David-
Just listened to your Wrestling with God message. Excellent! I found the idea of the Wrestling match being a moment of transition for Jacob enlightening. The name “heel catcher,” was he given this name because he literally caught on to Esau’s heel or did Issac and Rebekah think that he was trying to cheat his brother by holding him back?
Perhaps, the connotation of cheater that the term “heel catcher” held, eluded them at the naming. But as you pointed out, it didn’t elude others. Even Esau said it, “Is he not rightly call Jacob(cheater)” Can you imagine growing up with a name like that? Call a man less than a man, the old Chinese proverb says, and eventually, even the man will believe it. Fathers tend to favor the stronger child , the athlete, the outgoing one, where mothers tend to want to defend the weaker. I think Rebekah was what is known today as an enabler. None the less, Jacob became what was spoken over him.
I imagine that, for many myself included, it wouldn’t take much to come up with some condemning words spoken over them. And yet, Jacob was the heir to the promise. God was with him. What made the sons of Laban angry was that God was blessing Jacob so! I find it unimaginable that he should wrestle so hard to be blessed. He was already blessed!!!
Unfortunately, all Jacob saw of himself was “cheater.”
“Thy name shall no longer be called Jacob (Cheater) but Israel (Prince of God)”
That was cool but not nearly as good as being “a new creature: old things are passed away: behold, all things are become new.”
Yes, we’ve had things spoken over us, and maybe we even grew into them, but we are now “IN CHRIST!” We don’t just get a new name, we get to be a whole new person.
Unfortunately, like Jacob, we don’t necessarily get it. And unlike Jacob, it probably won’t happen in a single defining moment, but in a lot of teachable moments that God will use to demonstrate that we too are overcomers, “Princes of God” and more.
In the mean while,by faith, we have to keep proclaiming God’s truth of who we really are.

Well Said, Roger! Thanks so much for lending your insight to the teaching.

Blessings to all,

Dave

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Nov 22 2008

Wrestling with God

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings

Jacob Wrestling with God

Rembrandt’s Jacob’s struggle with the Angel, 1659

This teaching is an excerpt from our Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 5.

Returning to our study of the life of Jacob, we find that he has reached his own “teachable moment”. Jacob is now ready to receive from God. He has spent twenty years doing his own thing away from his promised inheritance. Now, those who know me well will say that I am pretty stubborn at times, but I hope that I would wake up and get a clue faster than twenty years. Jacob finally figured out that he is not as smart as he thought. Instead of putting one over on his relatives, he has been deceived and cheated by them. He has now come to the end of his own strength and is teachable, and it is here that God begins to intervene to transform his destiny.

Genesis 32:1-2     Jacob also went on his way, and the angels of God met him. [2] When Jacob saw them, he said, “This is the camp of God!” So he named that place Mahanaim. (ma-ha-nah´yim;  which means two camps)

You almost never hear this verse preached on! But just as there were angels at the border of the promised land when Jacob left, there were Angels at the border when he returned. (I wonder if it was the same angels? Did Jacob give them a knowing nod as he met them, twenty years older but wiser and ready to follow the Lord? ) Jacob could have easily despised his inheritance like his brother did, and stayed in Haran. But God was watching over Jacob’s destiny and protecting his inheritance. So it is with Us. We frequently rebel against God’s best for us, but in His mercy he preserves a way for us in spite of ourselves.
But now that he is coming back to God’s destiny, he has to deal with the flesh and the sins in his life. Jacob sent servants to meet with his brother Esau. They came back very excited: Esau was marching to meet Jacob, with 400 men! Now, you don’t take 400 men with you to meet your brother if you just want to have a hug and a handshake! No, as they say in New Jersey, Esau and “the boys’ wanted to “have a word” with Jacob.
Genesis 32:9-12

[9] Then Jacob prayed, “O God of my father Abraham, God of my father Isaac, O Lord, who said to me, ‘Go back to your country and your relatives, and I will make you prosper,’ [10] I am unworthy of all the kindness and faithfulness you have shown your servant. I had only my staff when I crossed this Jordan, but now I have become two groups. [11] Save me, I pray, from the hand of my brother Esau, for I am afraid he will come and attack me, and also the mothers with their children. [12] But you have said, ‘I will surely make you prosper and will make your descendants like the sand of the sea, which cannot be counted.’ ”

This is one of the earliest examples of prayer in the Bible, and it was not one of those half-hearted “thanks for the burger” prayers. No, this was one of those “oh, Lord, ooooh Loooord”  kind of prayers. Jacob is toast if God does not save him, and he knows it. Jacob cries out to the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, fully acknowledging the covenant with his family. Jacob finally acknowledges that it is God alone who has blessed him, it is God alone who can deliver him from his past, and it is God alone who can carry him into his destiny. He acknowledges that he is unworthy of the kindness and faithfulness God has shown him. But now he claims the promise in the midst of his trial:  “ Lord, Esau is coming to kill me, but you said that you would prosper me.”

Jacob now prepares for the worst- He sends great gifts to Esau to try and turn aside his anger. He then sent his wives and children over the ford of the Jabbok River, which was the boundary of his promised land, and waits alone to hear from God.

Genesis 32:24-29
So Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled with him till daybreak. [25] When the man saw that he could not overpower him, he touched the socket of Jacob’s hip so that his hip was wrenched as he wrestled with the man. [26] Then the man said, “Let me go, for it is daybreak.” But Jacob replied, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.”
[27] The man asked him, “What is your name?”
“Jacob,” he answered.
[28] Then the man said, “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel, because you have struggled with God and with men and have overcome.”
[29] Jacob said, “Please tell me your name.”
But he replied, “Why do you ask my name?” Then he blessed him there.

The Lord does not let Jacob enter the promised land without confronting his past. He cannot walk into God’s destiny in his life without coming face to face with God. He begins to wrestle with God, and during the fight, his flesh is broken, and he walked with a limp the rest of his life. Even so, it was not enough to leave behind his wanderings. It was not enough to return to God’s destiny for his life. It was not enough to throw himself solely on the mercy of  God in his troubles. No! he had come this far, and would not let go until he received a transformation from God himself! In spite of his flesh being broken, he hangs on and says NO! I WILL NOT LET GO UNTIL YOU BLESS ME!
You see, Jacob had lied and cheated his way to get blessings from men. But his trials and troubles, twenty years being cheated by Laban, and now a threat on his very life had refined his character and brought him to the realization that nothing less than a transformation from God himself would change his destiny.
The question was cutting: “what is your Name?” Jacob must now admit before God that he is a cheat, a supplanter, a deceiver. He comes face to face with his sin, and his flesh nature. He cannot cross into his destiny until it is broken. Then the Lord speaks destiny into his life:

[28] Then the man said, “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel, because you have struggled with God and with men and have overcome.

Whenever there is a name change of an individual in scripture, is symbolic of a profound spiritual change. Jacob would no longer be the cheat, the one who was not the rightful patriarch. Now by God’s grace he became Israel, which according to Strong’s in Hebrew means “He will rule as God” He is no longer the cheat, he is the Ruler under God’s hand.
Jacob was from this moment transformed, and the nation that he fathered was named after him: Israel.
Maybe you are going through distress at this time. A lot of us are. Perhaps you have rebelled from God’s plan for your life and need to come back to the promised land. Maybe like Jacob you realize that the sin in your flesh, or baggage that you have from your family, or the mistakes that you have made are holding you back from going on with God. Maybe for the first time you have reached your own teachable moment and are willing to wrestle with God and have your nature changed.
Are you ready to confess before God where your life has brought you, and confront the issues that hold you back? Are you ready to grab a hold of God and not let go until He changes you? Are you fed up with living with Laban and ready to cross the Jabbok to live in God’s promise in your inheritance? If that is you, come to Him. He will confront your flesh, but He will transform your spirit as you press into your destiny in Him.

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Nov 11 2008

The Teachable Moment

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings

Meet one of these on the trail and you may have a teachable moment!

This teaching is an excerpt from our Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 5.

Years ago, I had the honor of serving as a leader in a youth ministry, Royal Rangers,  a Christian scouting program. Modeled after the Boy Scouts of America, Royal Rangers develops character and leadership in young men, while adding Christian discipleship. In short, it is a fantastic program to develop Godly young men.  It was amazing how much more open to the things of God these kids were when they got away from the television, telephone and video games for a weekend.  I was part of a particularly excellent outpost, that would even take the older boys on backpack or canoe adventures in wilderness areas in Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma.
I served there during my late twenties, and it was during this time that I began to write bible studies and teach. I had a mentor who spoke into my life as I was training to be part of the program, who taught me about the “Teachable Moment”.
The concept of the teachable moment is simple. When mentoring someone in Christ, be sensitive for a time when the Holy Spirit will orchestrate a moment where the student is receptive to instruction. In this moment, a few words will stay with them for a lifetime, whereas a thousand words at the wrong time seem to run off  like water. Usually this happens when the student comes to a challenging point, and realizes they don’t have all the answers. At this point, the mentor can gently and in love do some honest character building and instruction.
My friend gave me this example of a teachable moment: He had taken a group of younger boys out on their first overnight backpack trip in Texas, west of Fort Worth. These kids were a little “green” in camping jargon, and needed a little extra supervision. The boys were told not to wander away alone from the camp, and to stay on the trails. After a while, they noticed that one boy was missing. They looked for him on the trails near the camp, even calling for him. Soon my friend came upon the lad, off, trail, “frozen” like a statue in terror right in front of a big ‘ol Texas diamondback rattlesnake. These are really intimidating when coiled up to strike, rattling menacingly, particularly when the only way out is by backcountry trail! After waiting a while longer, the snake began to edge away, and the boy was coaxed to slowly back away as well.
Now the leader spoke: “Son, remember how I told you not to get off of the trail? Satan watches for people who get into disobedience and let their feet take them to places that they should not be. When they are alone, he comes to them to wreak havoc, to kill, steal and destroy.”
These gentle words, spoken at that teachable moment, will forever be with that young man. He had gone his own way, but suddenly came face to face with his folly. But the mercy of God was with him that day, and he learned an unforgettable lesson.
In our last post we were studying the life of Jacob: He had cheated, lied and rebelled against the promise of God on his life, even leaving the land that God promised him. But after twenty years of being himself deceived and cheated by his uncle Laban, Jacob came to realize that the only reason that he had anything at all was because of God’s hand upon his life. Things were going poorly with the sons of Laban, as well as Laban himself, and his life had grown toilsome. It was at this point that Jacob reached the end of his rope, the end of his own crafty nature, and came to his teachable moment.

Genesis 31:1-3
Jacob heard that Laban’s sons were saying, “Jacob has taken everything our father owned and has gained all this wealth from what belonged to our father.” [2] And Jacob noticed that Laban’s attitude toward him was not what it had been. [3] Then the Lord said to Jacob, “Go back to the land of your fathers and to your relatives, and I will be with you.”

Now, after leaving the promised land twenty years before, God speaks to Jacob to return, back to his inheritance, but also to face his past, which would also have to be dealt with. But God’s promise remains the same: “I will be with you”

At this teachable moment, Jacob now listens to the Lord, and returns to the promised land to enter into his destiny.
Perhaps you have had a few teachable moments in your life. (I’d love to hear about them, send me a few comments!) Perhaps you are there now with the uncertain and trying times that we have today. I want to encourage you: When you have come face to face with your own weakness, listen to the Lord when you hear that still, small voice in your spirit. The Lord will guide you like a loving father and teach you to overcome and to prosper, and to grow into the person He is leading you to become.

Next- Wrestling with God

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Nov 08 2008

The Promise and the Contradiction

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings

On the road of your life, you may come face to face with some contradictions.

On the road of your life, you may come upon some contradictions.

This teaching is an excerpt from our Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 5.

In our last Post, we saw how Jacob had a promise of God over his life, but had character issues, even cheating his brother out of the birthright. He came by this behavior honestly enough, as his mother Rebekah would also deceive and cheat her own family to get ahead. In Genesis 27, it was Rebekah who heard that Isaac, who was now old and blind, was about the bless Esau. In verse 8 she commanded her son to take part in a scheme to deceive her blind husband. With her help, Jacob prepare a meal for his father, and wearing Esau’s clothes masquerades as Esau. Isaac, who is deceived, speaks a powerful patriarchal blessing over Jacob, even making Jacob the master of Esau.
So sneaky Jacob once again puts one over on his brother and even deceives his own father. But now he will reap what he has sown. Esau is furious, declaring that Jacob is correctly named. Esau planned to wait until his father’s death, and then kill his brother. Rebekah hears this, and commands Jacob to leave the country, She now concocts a scheme to have Isaac to send Jacob to her brother, saying that the women of the land are disgusting to her, and that Jacob should not marry a Canaanite woman. Jacob agrees and sends his son to Rebekah’s family in Haran.
So here it is: Jacob has truly fulfilled his name, twice supplanting his brother in his desire to take hold of all of God’s destiny for his family. But now the contradiction comes to full fruit: Esau wants to kill him, and to save his own life he leaves the very land promised as an inheritance to him that he has deceptively stove to lay hold of. Instead of receiving the double portion of wealth from his father’s household that he cheated his brother out of, he must now leave all behind.
But God is not through with Jacob.  Jacob follows his Father’s command, and goes to the land of Haran to her people to get a wife from his Uncle Laban. Leaving Beersheba and the land promised to his family, Jacob has a dream where the Lord appears to him:
Genesis 28:12-16
He had a dream in which he saw a stairway resting on the earth, with its top reaching to heaven, and the angels of God were ascending and descending on it. [13] There above it stood the Lord, and he said: “I am the Lord, the God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac. I will give you and your descendants the land on which you are lying. [14] Your descendants will be like the dust of the earth, and you will spread out to the west and to the east, to the north and to the south. All peoples on earth will be blessed through you and your offspring. [15] I am with you and will watch over you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this land. I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you.”

Even though Jacob has cheating his family, and is running for his very life, and is abandoning the land that God has promised for an inheritance, God shows His faithfulness. Jacob has a vision where he see that Angels guarding the border of his land, and God himself promised not only to bring him back to this land, but also to be with him wherever he goes. What amazes me is that Jacob hears God re-affirm that the land is his inheritance and then goes ahead and leaves the country anyway!

Jacob goes to meet his Uncle Laban and becomes engaged to Laban’s younger daughter Rachel. But Laban is just as much a cheat as his sister! At his wedding, Laban deceives Jacob, so that he marries the older sister Leah! Jacob is furious, but Laban excuses his treachery, telling Jacob that among his people the older daughter must marry first. He then gives Rachel to Jacob as a wife as well. What Jacob had sown, he was now reaping! He stole his brother’s birthright, and now his own family deceives him to prevent him from doing it again by marrying the younger daughter ahead of the older. And we see a pattern in the family: Just a Rebekah’s schemes brought strife to the family between the two brothers, now her brother’s schemes bring the same strife between the two sisters. And Laban continued to cheat and deceive Jacob, changing his wages ten times. What Jacob had sown was now living in his very tent! But the Lord protected Jacob, and he prospered. And Jacob came to realize that in spite of himself, it was only because of the Lord’s covering that he prospered. He was a deceiver, but he had been deceived. He was a cheat, but he had been cheated. Finally Jacob came face to face with the fact that in his own strength he was nothing. In his rebuke to Laban upon his departure, he admits this:

Genesis 31:42
“If the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and the fear of Isaac, had not been for me, surely now you would have sent me away empty-handed. God has seen my affliction and the toil of my hands, so He rendered judgment last night.”

At this point Jacob is at his end. He is going back to the country that God promised him. He knows that he will have to make peace with Esau. He has now reached the point that he knows that God is his only source and protection. But in reaching the end of his own schemes, the end of his own strength, Jacob comes to the “Teachable Moment” in his life where God can transform his destiny.

Next- The Teachable Moment

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Nov 06 2008

The Inheritance of God

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings

Sunset over the mediterranian, Caesrea, Israel

Sunset over the Mediterranean Sea, Caesarea, Israel

This teaching is an excerpt from our Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 5.

Genesis 31:1-3
Jacob heard that Laban’s sons were saying, “Jacob has taken everything our father owned and has gained all this wealth from what belonged to our father.” [2] And Jacob noticed that Laban’s attitude toward him was not what it had been. [3] Then the Lord said to Jacob, “Go back to the land of your fathers and to your relatives, and I will be with you.”

So Jacob finds himself in a difficult and worsening situation in the land where he was living. (How many of us have felt that way lately!) The Lord tells him that it is time to pick up and move his family back to the land of his fathers. It seems that sometimes when the Lord wants to change the situation in our lives, that we begin to feel uncomfortable where we are. A mother bird will begin to remove the soft downy lining of the nest just before it is time for the chicks to leave the nest. In the same way I believe the Lord sometimes will start to loosen the things that tie us to one place, in order to move us into a new season in our lives. This verse marks the beginning of the transformation of this man from Jacob “one who supplants”, one who steals, one who cheats, to Israel the patriarch.
To understand what the Lord was doing here, we have to revisit the life of Jacob. In Genesis chapter 17, when the Lord established the covenant of circumcision with Abraham, he promised that the descendants of Abraham would live in the same covenant as Abraham himself, and that the Lord would give the Land of Canaan to them forever. His descendants were to become Kings, and the fathers of many nations. So Abraham’s children had an inheritance in the Lord as members of the covenant promise of God.
In Genesis when Rebekah, the wife of Isaac, Abraham’s son, was pregnant, it was like the twins in her Womb were always fighting. When she prayed, the Lord told her:

Genesis 25:23
The Lord said to her,
“Two nations are in your womb,
and two peoples from within you will be separated;
one people will be stronger than the other,
and the older will serve the younger.”

The Lord had spoken blessings and destiny over the children of Abraham. Each was to become a patriarch of a nation. Esau was the first born, but Jacob was holding on to his heel even as he was born. The name Jacob means “one who grasps at the heel” or “one who supplants”.
Have you ever noticed that names, particularly in the Old Testament have a huge spiritual impact. Jacob became a deceiver and one who supplants. And even as their seemed to be strife between the brothers almost from the womb, their household also had some unhealthy things in it when they were growing up. The scripture says that Isaac loved Esau, but Rebekah loved Jacob. The parental favoritism certainly did not help the relationships within the family.

Picking up in Genesis 25:

Genesis 25:29-34
Once when Jacob was cooking some stew, Esau came in from the open country, famished. [30] He said to Jacob, “Quick, let me have some of that red stew! I’m famished!” (That is why he was also called Edom.)
[31] Jacob replied, “First sell me your birthright.”
[32] “Look, I am about to die,” Esau said. “What good is the birthright to me?”
[33] But Jacob said, “Swear to me first.” So he swore an oath to him, selling his birthright to Jacob.
[34] Then Jacob gave Esau some bread and some lentil stew. He ate and drank, and then got up and left.
So Esau despised his birthright.

Here is where we begin to see the tension on the destiny of these two men. On one hand, God has promised that each of them will become the father of a nation. On the other hand, each one here reveals a serious character flaw: The birthright that Esau despised was far more than the double portion of worldly inheritance given to the eldest son. Esau put no value in the fact that he was the first-born son of the family of the covenant. He in essence said “ I value a bowl of stew more than I value the call of God on my life and my family”. Jacob, on the other hand, greatly valued this, but was willing to cheat his brother to get the birthright.
How did God look upon this? In Malachi Chapter 1, the Lord said:

Malachi 1:2-3
“Yet I have loved Jacob, [3] but Esau I have hated, and I have turned his mountains into a wasteland and left his inheritance to the desert jackals.”

Wow. Since Esau despised his inheritance promised by the Lord, the Lord made it a wasteland.  Jacob loved the things of God, and was loved by God, but the Lord had to deal with his character before he could enter into the promise over his life. How could Jacob become the patriarch of a great nation when he was a cheat and had supplanted his own Brother? Obviously he needed some “character building” before he could enter into his destiny.

If you are hungry for the things of God, and earnestly desire to follow in His plan for your life, then God will begin to correct the flaws in your character that hold you back from achieving His best for you. If you look at every prophetic promise in scripture, the Lord spoke to his children as to what they would become, not what they were at that time. When we were yet sinners, Jesus died to redeem us. God called a shepherd boy a king. God called a childless old man the father of a multitude of nations. You get the idea. But in each of these cases there was a journey that helped them become what God wanted them to be. So if you are finding yourself on a journey with God, rejoice and be encouraged, because he sees you now, as you will become, as His grace unfolds in your life.

Next- The Promise and the Contradiction

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