Why The "Panicking Christian"?

Like most Christians, I occasionally find myself in a borderline, all out panic about something which I already knew, but seem to have forgotten or that I only knew in my head, as opposed to my heart. And mercifully, God decides to show me what is really going on or what it is that I needed to know, before I completely lose my mind.

So the writing within is just that. It is that which God has shown and taught me while I was typically in one of those times in my life. Since the way in which He has chosen to reveal things to me tend to be fairly easy to follow and understand, I am sharing them via this format. That said, I take no glory for any of this. It is God whom has given me the ability to write, and it is He who has given me the content to write as well and He who saved me by His glorious grace in the first place.

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Missed Memo

A (redundant) question regarding "Name and Claim" / "Prosperity" preaching:  did the Apostles "miss the memo"?

"Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” ~ 2 Cor 12:8-9

"Stop drinking only water, and use a little wine because of your stomach and your frequent illnesses." ~ 1 Tim 5:23

"To this very hour we go hungry and thirsty, we are in rags, we are brutally treated, we are homeless." ~ 1 Cor 4:11

At its' core, the name and claim/prosperity "gospel" is a self-centered view of Christianity, as well as God, which teaches the humanistic view that He exists for the health, wealth, well being and happiness of man.  The "claiming" that this teaches is more akin to neo-pagan practices than that of the Bible - that one can change reality by merely thinking, or speaking it, into being. Let that sink in for a minute.

While it is true that we are loved by God, He never promises us an easy life. If anything we are told that we will see trouble in this life (John 16:33) but we're also told that we will never be left to face it alone either (Matthew 28:20).  He does say we are to give our anxiety and worries to Him (1 Peter 5:7) and that He will provide for us daily (Matt 6:11) but our trust is to be in Him each day and not in our stockpiles or surplusses (Exo 16:19-20). After all, a slight change in the stock market can put a millionaire in a homeless shelter very quickly.

There are people in the grave - the grave - who "named and claimed" themselves free of cancer right until the end and surely one cannot argue they had no faith since they held to it even as they felt their life leaving them. Does God still heal? Yes, but not because somehow we can force Him into action. He heals when He heals for numerous reasons, some of which we understand, some of which we do not but, then again, we're not God either (Isaiah 55:9).  Does God allow some people to have more than others? Yes, He does, but again since am not God cannot tell you who or why or anything of the like but I do know that He does say we're not supposed to hoard it for ourselves (Luke 12:16-21) so that we can "live the good life" - we cannot take it with us after all.

This life and world is far from perfect - something 2020 has been more than willing to show us thus far - and if you believe that you can name and claim your way into a paradise here and now, you are in for a rather unpleasant surprise.  God does love you - wildly so - but He does not exist for us, we exist for Him. After all, we are called His children, not his equal and certainly not His master.

*NOTE*
It is not my intention to come off hateful, mocking or any other such thing with this post. It is merely cautionary in nature for it is so very easy to get led off the path and into a false doctrine which sounds good on the surface or appeals to our own selfish or self righteous natures. Even the Apostles warned of such things because they were present in the early church. And it does not matter if you sit in a pew or stand behind a pulpit, we are all capable of being deceived for we are all human. So please, be mindful of what you listen to; weigh it well and against scripture (remember in context) and the character of God