Archive for April, 2009

Apr 30 2009

Join us this Saturday for Radio Antioch

Published by David Cranfill under News

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Hello Friends,

Just a quick reminder for those of you in Northern Illinois and SE Wisconsin, we will be having our regular Saturday night Radio Antioch meeting this Saturday night at 7 PM.
Join us for a time of worship, fellowship and teaching.

We are meeting at the Christian Life Fellowship church, a wonderful church in Antioch that lets us “borrow” their sanctuary for these meetings. Their Address is:

41625 North Deep Lake Road Antioch, Illinois 60002

For Mapquest directions, click HERE.

Please send us an e-mail if you have any questions.
We hope to see you there!

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Apr 29 2009

The Apostle Paul, Weapon of God

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings, Video

A beautiful mosaic of St Paul in Westminster Cathedral.

A  mosaic of St Paul from Westminster Cathedral.

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This Teaching is Part 5 of our Podcast Episode 10. To watch as a short video, click the player above. To watch the full teaching of Episode 10, Click HERE.

Acts 9:1-9  Meanwhile, Saul was still breathing out murderous threats against the Lord’s disciples. He went to the high priest [2] and asked him for letters to the synagogues in Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might take them as prisoners to Jerusalem. [3] As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. [4] He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” [5] “Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked. “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied. [6] “Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.”    [7] The men traveling with Saul stood there speechless; they heard the sound but did not see anyone. [8] Saul got up from the ground, but when he opened his eyes he could see nothing. So they led him by the hand into Damascus. [9] For three days he was blind, and did not eat or drink anything.

So Saul is on a mission to destroy the church. In his mind, he is at the pinnacle of Judaism, He has letters from the High Priest and has become the “protector of the faith”, so to speak. Suddenly this divine confrontation comes, and here Saul is knocked off his horse, flat on his back. (Actually, it doesn’t’ actually say he was on a horse, and if he were riding it was likely a donkey, but you get the idea. The journey he was on was about 120 miles, or about 6 days if on foot.) But he hit the ground- Paul was face to face with the contradiction: He thinks all is right with God, and then suddenly this happens!  No wonder he asked “Who are you, Lord?”  If this is Jesus, then in all his zeal Saul has really messed up. He is caught in the middle of those letters in his “back pocket” from the high priest, and the risen Christ in front of him. Talk about arrested! He was on a mission for the religious powers of that day, and God arrested him on the spot, knocked him to the ground, and asks but one question: Why are you persecuting Me?.

I love the “who are you, Lord?”  Because if Saul now is before God Himself, he some re-evaluation of his religion to do! Jesus in His mercy simply says “ I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting”. Saul finds himself struck blind. If you remember, that was what God did to the men of Sodom when they needed to be stopped in their tracks. Saul now realizes he has some repenting to do.

Here we have another believer arrested. Saul, in his misguided zeal for God, was destroying the church. But God knocked him off his horse, arresting him in his folly and turned him into the greatest apostle and evangelist ever known: The Lord says in Acts 9:15 that Saul was His chosen instrument to carry His name before the Gentiles and their kings and before the people of Israel.

Now the Hades Daily Chronicle has this headline:

Danger! That Believer
arrested by God,
and now turned against Us!

Not only did God turn Saul around, but the very monster that was persecuting the church was now turned against the devil. Satan though he had created a weapon in Saul, and God said, “okay, now point the muzzle in the other direction! I love it when the Lord messes with the devil!

So Saul becomes the man we remember as Paul the apostle, one of the greatest servants in the kingdom.  Since Paul had literally been a murderer, I wonder if the memory of his misguided zeal kept him humble in spite of the awesome things he was entrusted with.

In fact, Paul came to have a keen understanding that God uses tough times to open doors in the kingdom. In Philippians 1:12 he says about his imprisonment:

Philip. 1:12  Now I want you to know, brothers, that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel.

God can use the things that have happened in your life as a weapon against the enemy as well. Turn them over to God, repent of any sin and let the Lord heal you, and now, you can help others going through the same thing. The more surrendered Paul became, the more he could be used by God. All of his trials served to build his character so that he could bear the task before him.

I wonder how often in our zeal we do religious things for God, missing His real plan? Paul was one of the greatest believers ever, but boy, was he ever wrong in this case- I wonder if sometimes the church itself needs to be arrested and put back on track!

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Apr 16 2009

Radio Antioch Meeting this Saturday Night

Published by David Cranfill under News

Radio Antioch Logo

Hello Friends,

After taking a few weeks off to allow our friends to attend a local conference, we will be resuming our regular Saturday night Radio Antioch
meetings this Saturday night at 7 PM.

Join us for a time of worship, fellowship and teaching.

We are meeting at the Christian Life Fellowship church, a great local church in Antioch that lets us “borrow” their sanctuary for these meetings. Their Address is:

41625 North Deep Lake Road Antioch, Illinois 60002

For Mapquest directions, click HERE.

If you have questions, or want to get involved, please send us an e-mail.

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Apr 13 2009

Was the Church Scattered or Sown?

Published by David Cranfill under Teachings, Video

A rice farmer scattering seed




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   This teaching is part 4 of Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 10.
Click above to watch a short video of this teaching. The full
video of Podcast 10 is available Here.

 

   Acts 8:1-4   And Saul was there, giving approval to his death. On that day a great persecution broke out against the church at Jerusalem, and all except the apostles were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria. [2] Godly men buried Stephen and mourned deeply for him. [3] But Saul began to destroy the church. Going from house to house, he dragged off men and women and put them in prison. [4] Those who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went.

 

    Saul, of course, is a Hebrew name, and this same man later became known in scripture as Paul. Anytime you see a name change in scripture, there has been a spiritual transformation. But on this day, he was bent upon the destruction of the believers in Christ.

     I believe that this persecution was demonically driven. One reason that I believe this is the fact that Paul arrested women as well as men. In the culture of that day, the women were frequently treated as second class citizens. It would be unheard of in that day for them to be arrested for something like this, as they were not considered dangerous. But the women in the early church were often fasting and praying, and had a significant impact upon the spiritual realm,
“praying in” the moves of the spirit right along side the men, and so were truly dangerous in the Spirit.

 

I can see those imaginary tabloids again with the same the same headline:

 

Danger- Believers Arrested!

 

   Paul was taking away the believers in chains. In fact, later in Acts 22:4, Paul admitted that his persecution brought about the deaths of a number of believers. In our minds, this sudden onset of hard times for the believers is a dangerous tragedy. But let me show you something: Look up the Greek word that is used in verse 4 that is translated “scattered”:

diaspeiro, dee-as-pi’-ro; from Greek (dia) which means  through, on account of ,and  because of.  The second word is speiro which literally means to SOW as in planting a seed. In fact, Speiro is the very word translated as "Sow" used in the parable of the sower in Matthew 13 and Luke 8, in the famous parable about sowing seed in the kingdom in Matthew 13, the parable of the talents in Mathew 25, and also the teaching from Matthew Six and Luke Twelve, talking about how the birds do not sow but are provided for by God. So while the church may have looked upon this persecution as a tragedy, the word of God literally says that ON ACCOUNT OF THIS Persecution THE CHURCH WAS SOWN OUT AS SEED, so as to bear a crop in the kingdom of God!

   So if you just read your trusty English bible, you get the picture of the believers fleeing for their lives. In fact, the “Hell Daily Chronicle” newspaper probably had the same headline- Believers arrested! But what God is literally saying here is that during this time of persecution, He “arrested” the church that was on one path, and sowed them into the place where they will bear fruit.

    (By they way- if you are feeling a little dry in your scripture reading sometime, I DARE you to dig a little deeper and look of the meaning of the original words. The revelations you will get will amaze you.)

 

   So what had Jesus told them to do? He told them to go into all the world. Instead the formed a commune. Now, it is noteworthy that they shared their possessions and fed the widows, but instead of taking care of business they had degenerated to arguing over who got more food. Frequently today you hear that first church in Jerusalem held up as a model, because of their giving. Well. I’m all in favor of giving. If God tells you to give your money to build a church in some foreign country, or give to the poor, DO IT! But just the act of giving is not all that great if you are not doing what you were told to do, which in their case was to go into all the world.

    So Look what happened- The church was scattered. But Phillip, another of the seven deacons, went out and started a revival! Others spread out from Jerusalem and begin to take the Gospel to the nations. It took a persecution to shake the comfortable church, riddled with internal jealousies and rivalries, out of being a nice commune focused on taking care of its own, transforming it into the world-changing group that it became. Sometimes whole churches need to be arrested- BY THE HOLY SPIRIT!

     And sometime God will allow the enemy to overplay his hand, so that He can move strongly on behalf of the kingdom. The Lord will allow the enemy to push against God’s people. Maybe they lose a job, or become ill. But then the Lord will intervene, strengthening His people and building a mighty testimony. That’s what happened here. The enemy came against the comfortable church with a little persecution, and God used it to align them with their destiny to change nations.

   So now again the front page of the Hell daily news reads-
 

Danger- Believers Arrested!
 

   Now they have become a weapon that endangers the very strongholds of Satan. Jesus had told the believers to go to the nations- But it took some shaking to get them out of their comfort zone to actually go. If you are going through some tough times, sometimes God uses those times to prepare you for his purposes. Now, they had become truly dangerous.

 

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Apr 05 2009

Where were You on Palm Sunday?

Published by David Cranfill under Podcasts, Teachings

Where are You in the passion play?
Where Are YOU in this picture?

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This Teaching is Radio Antioch Podcast Episode 11, available in AUDIO format only. To listen, click the player above.


Today is Palm Sunday. As we study about Palm Sunday, I want to begin with a few thoughts for you. In the next few days in countless churches across America there will be “Passion Plays” – Plays, Dramas and Musicals that depict the last week of Jesus and the events of the Cross. In any drama, there is a setting, a time, and a cast of characters. Many of you are familiar with the cast of characters of the passion play- Jesus, the disciples, the religious leaders, Herod, Pilate, even a thief, and how they relate to the events of that fateful week.


But I would say to you that  this play continues. For the Cross and the resurrection was the central event of Human history….Even from Eden, the prophetic word pointed forward to the cross. And afterwards all mankind finds their destiny in the story of the cross, some into life, and others to condemnation. The passion play is still unfolding even now, as your destiny lies in where you stand with the cross.


If the events of the Passion Week can be a play, then the events of Palm Sunday could be act one, and like the larger play there is a setting and a cast of characters.  The setting we know- Jerusalem, at the gates of the city….But many of the characters we overlook. But I say unto you that this play is still going on today. I have a challenge for you, as we examine the events of Act One of the Passion play, to find yourself within the cast, for some things may change, but other things remain the same. So as I speak to you today, listen with your spirit, as you may find yourself playing one or more parts in this, Act 1 on the Passion play.


Luke 19, 28-34 After Jesus had said this, he went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem. [29] As he approached Bethphage and Bethany at the hill called the Mount of Olives, he sent two of his disciples, saying to them, [30] “Go to the village ahead of you, and as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, which no one has ever ridden. Untie it and bring it here. [31] If anyone asks you, ‘Why are you untying it?’ tell him, ‘The Lord needs it.’ ” [32] Those who were sent ahead went and found it just as he had told them. [33] As they were untying the colt, its owners asked them, “Why are you untying the colt?” [34] They replied, “The Lord needs it.”


The first and Central Character of Act 1 is Jesus, who we know from Hebrews 12:2 as  the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. The first place you may see yourself in this play is Jesus, If Jesus lives in your heart, then you are a carrier of the life of God. Col. 1:27 speaks of Christ in You, the hope of Glory that we are revealing to the nations.


The next characters we meet are the two disciples sent ahead. The scriptures don’t tell us which of the two disciples, but I notice one particular trait that they had: They could be trusted with prophetic knowledge and would carry out the instructions, now matter how radical.  Imagine if this happened today: “Go into Antioch, and you will see a white Toyota corolla with the keys in it. If anyone asks, just tell them that Jesus told you to get it for Him and will send it back later” How many of you, if you got a prophesy or had a dream with these instructions, would dare to follow….Most of us would be praying really hard saying” Is that really you Lord?!”


The next cast member we meet is amazing also. This was the man who saw them taking the Donkey, and asked them about it. I am sure when he first heard them say “The Lord needs it and will send it back” his mind said “yeah, Right!” But then in his Spirit he heard the confirmation that this was really of God. How many of us when hearing something that outrageous would be able to hear that still, small voice inside telling us that God really does need our car, or our house, or our money? Would we hold loosely to our possessions, trusting them to the Lord?


John 12:13-16  They took palm branches and went out to meet him, shouting, “Hosanna!” “Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!” ”Blessed is the King of Israel!” [14] Jesus found a young donkey and sat upon it, as it is written,[15] “Do not be afraid, O Daughter of Zion;  see, your king is coming, seated on a donkey’s colt.” [16] At first his disciples did not understand all this. Only after Jesus was glorified did they realize that these things had been written about him and that they had done these things to him.


So here we have the next two characters. In verse 15 we have quoted a section from the Prophet Zechariah, in about 520 BC:


Zech. 9:9   Rejoice greatly, O Daughter of Zion!  Shout, Daughter of Jerusalem! See, your king comes to you, righteous and having salvation, gentle and riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.


So here is a man who has just returned to Judea after Cyrus issued the decree allowing the return, uttering a prophesy that will not be fulfilled for 500 years. Some of you have dreams and visions and prophesies….Do you give them faithfully even though you may never understand what all of them mean?


Our next characters are the other disciples, who, when they see God do something they don’t understand, study the scriptures to understand God’s plan.


By riding like this on the Donkey’s Colt, Jesus is publicly proclaiming (to those who would understand) the he is the Messiah.


Of course, you may see yourself in the Donkey….Being the Donkey is hard sometimes. It feels like you carry the entire burden on your back, everybody takes you for granted, and no-one really appreciates you for who you are….You are just the Donkey. But God saw this particular donkey in a surprising way. This donkey had a ministry prophesied 500 years before its birth, was ushered into that ministry by God Himself, and was used in a Kingdom event that has been taught about for two thousand years since. What it did wasn’t anything unusual for a donkey, letting a man ride on its back. Except for one point: The scripture says that no one had ever ridden this colt before. This donkey had not been “Broken” for riding, but was willing to submit to the Lord the first time. And if you see yourself like the donkey in this picture, remember God can use those who are willing!


Luke 19: 37-40 When he came near the place where the road goes down the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen: [38] “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord!” ”Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!” [39] Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to Jesus, “Teacher, rebuke your disciples!” [40] “I tell you,” he replied, “If they keep quiet, the stones will cry out.”


We find both of these characters in churches even today: Some people were there, carrying out religious ritual the same as the year before. But suddenly the presence of the Lord is with them, and they begin to worship with joy and all of their might. Of course there were a few Pharisees there that felt it was their duty to rebuke them for being too exuberant and undignified! Sadly, even today, when someone moves beyond “church as usual” into transforming joy and true worship, there is usually someone there to point out their error and their immaturity, to make sure that they never go there again!


Look at what they were shouting: this is from Psalm 118:26:  “Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.” They changed one word, adding King instead of “He”, but  The Jews would sing Psalms 113-118, called the Hallel (Hal el) every Passover season. Some here claimed Jesus as their messiah. But even if it was fresh on their minds- none of them took a clue from only a verse or two away:


Psalm 118:22   The stone the builders rejected has become the capstone;


It is interesting that there was a warning that the builders would reject Jesus only 4 verses away from the verse the crowd was chanting!


Matthew 21 10-11     When Jesus entered Jerusalem, the whole city was stirred and asked, “Who is this?”  [11] The crowds answered, “This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth in Galilee.”


Maybe this you. You came here today, and you see all of these excited people, and you are asking “What is This”….It says that the whole city was stirred…Maybe the Holy Spirit is stirring in your heart even now as you listen.


Some of those in this crowd were true worshipers, who had found their messiah. But it is likely that some of those that were in this crowd were also in the crowd later in the week that was yelling “Crucify him!”….Is this you? Do you blow this way and that from week to week, worshiping one week and sending the Lord back to the Cross in your sin the next week? Are you operating in a man-pleasing spirit, to please man and go along with what is popular with the crowd?


Matthew 21 12-14 Jesus entered the temple area and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves. [13] “It is written,” he said to them, ” ‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it a ‘den of robbers.’”  [14] The blind and the lame came to him at the temple, and he healed them.


Are you the disciple who makes the church a house of prayer? Or like the money changers are you in church with all the wrong motives and reasons? Does Jesus need to turn over a few tables in your heart to change your thinking or even perhaps bring you to repentance? Some of you are like the Blind and the lame, which came to Jesus to be healed. Maybe you already have been healed of life’s sicknesses and hurt, and remain joyfully in the temple worshiping. Or maybe you are in need of healing even today.

Luke 19:41-48   As he approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it [42] and said, “If you, even you, had only known on this day what would bring you peace–but now it is hidden from your eyes. [43] The days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle you and hem you in on every side. [44] They will dash you to the ground, you and the children within your walls. They will not leave one stone on another, because you did not recognize the time of God’s coming to you.”


Since Jerusalem Rejected Her messiah, in AD 70 this prophesy was fulfilled and the city destroyed. How many of us miss the hour of the Lord’s visitation in our lives, and will find ourselves in judgment?  Perhaps this is you today. Perhaps the Lord is tugging on your heat, and you are totally oblivious to his calling. Maybe there is a tear in Jesus’ eye as you walk by, as He knows the pains that will inevitably come your way as you walk out your life in rebellion. But Jesus went to that Cross for you, just as He did for the people of Jerusalem long ago. Won’t you listen to Him?


Maybe you are the devoted disciple getting direct instructions from the Lord, being used in important Kingdom business. Maybe you are the one who owns a donkey, or a car, house or other riches, that the Lord is asking you to hold on to loosely, and to trust Him with them. Maybe you are the prophetic person having dreams and visions that are hard to understand and may even be for a future generation. Are you the one who searches the Word to see what God is doing? Or perhaps after playing church all your life suddenly have encountered true worship, joy and the presence of God. Maybe you have a little (or a lot) of Pharisee in you, and often squelch the Spirit of God, looking righteous but not seeing the Messiah in your midst! Or maybe you don’t even know the Lord, and are asking for the first time “Who is this?”   Or do you blow one way and then the other, running with the crowd, more worried about what man would think instead of going after God with all your heart? Are you one of the intercessors, who with your prayers are a key pillar in the church, or are you like the money changer, here with an agenda? Maybe you are like the Blind and lame, and have already been healed, or perhaps you need to press in to Jesus for healing even this day.


Many of you will have identified at least in part with one of these. But like that crowd taking part in the real Act one of the passion play so long ago, the cross and the resurrection and redemption are just ahead. For some of you, the part in Act one of this play that you identify with is an encouragement. If so, Bravo! And be blessed.


Now to the others, you may see yourself playing a part that is not the right one for you, not God’s best for your life. Maybe you have begun well, but have found your part for this play difficult and have become discouraged. Maybe some of you even need to repent. If any of these are you then rejoice! For this is the season of the Cross, the season of redemption. Evan as we celebrate redemption next week on Resurrection Sunday there can be redemption and resurrection in your life today.


I believe that Jesus is saying this day “Come, recognize the hour of your visitation! Do not be like Jerusalem long ago. Do not let the Lord be weeping as you let another opportunity to enter into your destiny go by! Come to Him today and let him meet you and transform you! It is time for many of you to begin to rekindle that first love, to press in to prayer and worship like never before, or maybe to try out for a new part in the Passion play! Let this season be a resurrection of your passion for the Lord, a new springtime of Life as only the Lord can give.

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Apr 04 2009

Radio Antioch Audio Podcast Episode 10

Published by David Cranfill under Podcasts, Teachings

Radio Antioch Podcast Graphic

For our Audio Podcast listeners, here is Episode 10. If you prefer to watch the video version, click HERE.

The strange story of how the Church was transformed to become a weapon that endangers the very stronghold of Satan-

0:30 They could not overcome the Spirit
7:48 Danger! Believer Arrested!
16:41 What Messiah are you looking for?
21:49 Scattered or Sown?
31:57 Misguided Zeal
40:41 The destiny of a church
48:25 Holding Loosely to the things of this world


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Apr 02 2009

Radio Antioch Audio Podcast Episode 9

Published by David Cranfill under Podcasts

Radio Antioch Podcast Graphic

For our Audio Podcast Listeners, here is Episode Nine:

Episode Nine of the Radio Antioch Audio Podcast is a sermon by guest speaker Dr. Cliff Pash entitled “Why do we go to Church? recorded live at the Radio Antioch meeting on February 7th, 2009. The video version of this podcast may be found HERE

Dr. Pash is an African evangelist, Church planter and founder of the Advancing the Kingdom Bible Colleges in Uganda.

0:30        Why do we go to Church
9:00        What does your life say about God?
18:00      The people will know that God sent Jesus by the way we Love                each other.
27:00      Finding the Relationship with God that He desires
32:00      Demonstrating God’s character

To find out more about Dr. Pash, visit his website at www.advancingthekingdom.org

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