Seven Ways to Have More of God

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Anyone who has had an encounter with the Living God wants more. That is why Jesus had a following. People gathered around Him and followed Him wherever He went because they wanted more. We all want more of God, more of His presence, but how do we “get” more of God?

I am not an expert on this, but I was praying through these thoughts the other morning, and I believe God spoke to me through various passages in the Bible about how we all can have more of God.

We need to make room for Him

When God became man (Jesus), He came to His own, and His own people (the Jews) did not know Him. There was “no room in the inn”. We need to make room for God in our hearts and lives.

God emptied Himself to become a man, lived the life we could not live in perfect submission to the Father, suffered and died on the cross as atonement for our sin and rose again making the way for us to have fellowship with Him. If God emptied Himself for us, we need to empty ourselves for Him. We need to decrease so He can increase in us.

I am relaying these things in the order that God gave them to me, but I do not think there is any particular order in which we should do these things. That is, except for this one thing – we need to make room for God in our lives.

This does not just mean carving out some time during each day to pray and read the Bible; this means that we allow God to inhabit us and inform us in every aspect of our lives. We need to allow His Spirit to indwell us by making room in our hearts, by emptying ourselves and “getting out of God’s way” so that He can fill us with Himself.

We need to spend time away with Him

Jesus went away to pray and be alone with the Father often. Jesus was always going back to the Father alone, by himself. He found times to steal away from the crowds and the crowded marketplace to pray and just spend time with the Father. If Jesus needed to do that, we need to do that all the more if we want more of God in our lives.

We encounter God in many ways, but He speaks to us in a still, small voice. We need to be still and quiet to hear what God is saying. We need get away from the busyness of life, the things that crowd in upon us, and spend time with God, alone, where He can speak into our hearts, and we can learn directly from Him. We need to get away from other things and spend time with God by ourselves if we want more of God.

We need to wait for Him

Jesus told His disciples to go out into all the world and preach the Gospel. That is the Great Commission. But He followed the instruction “to go” with another instruction; He commanded them to do something that seemed completely counter-productive to the direction “to go”: He told them to wait.

He told them to wait for the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the promise of the Father. The Holy Spirit is “God with us” in the same way that Jesus was “God with us”; except that the Holy Spirit is God in us!

We often want to rush ahead of God. It is a natural inclination. After Jesus turned a few loaves and fishes into a feast for a crowd, the crowd wanted to seize Him and make Him king. When Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a donkey, the people celebrated Him as an earthly king and savior, but they did not realize other things needed to happen, first. Jesus needed to die for our sins. He needed to conquer sin and death. God, in His great mercy, was not ready to take the throne. He was extending the opportunity for generations to accept His atoning death for our sins and be saved.

We can not see what God sees and do not know what God knows. We need to wait for Him and seek to understand what God is doing right now in our lives, in the church we attend, in the area in which we live and in the world. When we wait for God, we are waiting to understand and waiting for His power to enable us to fulfill what He has for us to do. If we run out ahead of God, we will not be doing exactly what God wants us to do, when He wants us to do it, and we will be going in our own strength, instead of God’s strength.

We need to ask

What father, when his son asks for bread, gives him a stone? Jesus is the Bread of Life. He is the Living Water. He invites us to partake of Himself, but there is something in the asking.

God wants us to ask. God is Person. He made us in His own image. He made us for fellowship. When we ask, we are stepping into fellowship with God. He delights to give of Himself, but he is looking for an exchange: He draws, and we respond; we ask, and He gives.

If we want more of God, we need to ask for God Himself. Our treasure is where our heart is. We could ask for things for ourselves or even for others, but the greatest treasure is God Himself. Our treasure awaits us in heaven, but God has given us His Holy Spirit – which is Himself – and we can partake of that treasure on earth. We just need to ask.

We need to seek

God promises to reveal Himself to us when seek Him, and we find God when we seek Him with all our hearts. Seeking God with all of our hearts means we need to be “all in”!

We need to devote our hearts to the seeking, and what we seek needs to be God, Himself, if we want more of God in our lives.

As we seek God, we stop seeking other things. Other things, even good things, are poor substitutes for God. In the process of seeking God, we must stop seeking other things and devote ourselves to the greatest thing – God. In that process, we align ourselves with God; we put away the lesser things; and we set our sights on God. He wants us to seek because, as we seek Him, we focus on Him and take our focus off of other things.

We need to go

Jesus told us to go. There is a time to go, and when we go, the Holy Spirit is right there with us to help us. Although there are times we need to wait for God, there are times that we need to go. Ultimately, going is what we need to be doing. I think the Church, as a whole, misses God because the Church is not going.

Peter, James and John climbed a high mountain with Jesus. On the mountain top Jesus was transfigured before their eyes. Elijah and Moses appeared with Him. What a “mountaintop experience”! Literally. The disciples wanted to pitch a tent and camp there. – Who wouldn’t?!! – But that was not God’s plan.

It is never God’s plan for us to camp on our experiences with Him. In those encounters, Jesus shows Himself in all of His glory; we learn things about ourselves, about God and about the world; but He does not intend for us to pitch a tent and stay there. He took the disciples back down the mountain to the valley where the purpose of God is played out in real, everyday life.

We cannot camp on our experiences with God. God has a plan, and He wants us to move on to fulfill that plan. He wants us to go with Him. If we camp where we experience God, He will move on; and we will be left on an empty mountain top. We should seek God on those mountain tops, but we need to follow God down from the mountain to the valley of everyday life where the purpose of God plays out.

We need to do

Jesus spent much of His time walking the dusty roads, on the street, in the marketplace, mixing with people, healing the sick and sharing the Gospel. If we want more of God, we need to be where God is and doing what God wants to do – reaching people with the Gospel and love. We will encounter God by doing those things Jesus did.

God told the prophets that He wants His people to administer justice, to show compassion and mercy to each other. Pure religion is looking after orphans and widows in their distress and keeping ourselves from being polluted by the world. We need to be about the business of God if we want more of God in our lives.

Doing means speaking as well. Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. If we are not telling people about the Gospel, who will? God chose to use us and send us into all the world to preach the Gospel, and we need to be doing what God wants us to do if we want more of God in our lives.

I began Navigating by Faith in response to what I believe God was speaking into my heart. For me, this is part of being about God’s business. I believe He has given each person gifts and burdens and callings that are unique to each individual. We all have the ability to write, serve, speak, have compassion, pastor help, etc., but God gives out different measures to different people, and God places different things on different peoples’ hearts to make use of those gifts and abilities. We do not live this life alone, in a vacuum. We need each other.
 
Let me know what you think. What has God put on your heart? What do you think He is calling you to do with the gifts and abilities you have and the calling He placed within you? I would love to hear from you.

When God Withdraws

When God seems withdrawn from us, that is time to turn from our own ways, our own desires, and to seek Him for His own sake….

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“Jesus, perceiving that they were intending to come and take Him by force to make Him king, withdrew….” (John 6:15)

This verse provides a clue as to why God seems withdrawn from us sometimes, and how we find Him when he seems withdrawn. Continue reading “When God Withdraws”

Why I Cannot Identify as a Gay Christian

This article that appears below has caught me up like few articles really have. Consider your own identity, what you think makes you tick. Consider something you were born with and is part of you like your hand. Now, think about giving that identity up; think about walking away from that thing that makes you tick; think about cutting off your hand. I am re-blogging this article without any intention to address the controversial issue that resides inside. Consider the example as it might relate to any particular thing that might stand in the way of a closer relationship with Christ: riches, comfort, eating, career, popularity…. The Bible is pretty clear on the things that separate us from God – the things that we are tempted to pursue, embrace and hold on to. Consider that 1 Thessalonians 5:22 urges us to “abstain from evil”; and consider that the word, “abstain”, in the Greek means “to have one thing by separating from (letting go of) another”. We hold fast to Christ, by letting go of all that is not of Christ – that letting go includes our very selves.

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So lately God has been on a roll with dropping little bombs filled with exactly what I need to hear, exactly when I need to hear it.

“Woe unto you when all men speak well of you.” – Luke 6:26

This was one of those bombs. I came across it innocently enough while reading an article online, and it annoyed me enough that I needed to look up the context.

Blessed are you when men hate you, and ostracize you, and insult you, and scorn your name as evil, for the sake of the Son of Man. Be glad in that day and leap for joy, for behold, your reward is great in heaven. For in the same way their fathers used to treat the prophets. But woe to you who are rich, for you are receiving your comfort in full. Woe to you who are well-fed now, for you…

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Sealed with the Holy Spirit

lightstock_108943_xsmall_user_7997290In Ephesians 1:13-14, Paul says that we have been “sealed in God with the Holy Spirit of promise who is given as a pledge of inheritance”.

We might be tempted to read this simply as flowery, but dogmatic language. I believe nothing could be further from the truth. Paul is talking about an act of God by which HE puts His stamp on US in a real, personal way, and even more than that….

Christians often talk about the promises of God that are in the Bible, but Paul talks about the “Holy Spirit of promise”. Continue reading “Sealed with the Holy Spirit”

How Do We Present The Gospel?

As Christians, are we going to be like Peter, lopping off the centurion’s ear with a sword?

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“Suppose one reads a story of filthy atrocities in the paper. Then suppose that something turns up suggesting that the story might not be quite true, or not quite so bad as it was made out. Is one’s first feeling, `Thank God, even they aren’t quite so bad as that,’ or is it a feeling of disappointment, and even a determination to cling to the first story for the sheer pleasure of thinking your enemies as bad as possible? If it is the second then it is, I am afraid, the first step in a process which, if followed to the end, will make us into devils. You see, one is beginning to wish that black was a little blacker. If we give that wish its head, later on we shall wish to see grey as black, and then to see white itself as black. Finally, we shall insist on seeing everything – God and our friends and ourselves included – as bad, and not be able to stop doing it: we shall be fixed for ever in a universe of pure hatred.” – C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

We need to be very careful how we present the Gospel to the world. Please read this editorial. See the Gospel Coalition’s August article on Whether ISIS is Beheading Children. Back in August, there was some question whether the beheadings were really happening. It seems to be accepted as fact now, but the point of the article is important. We need to avoid being carried away with emotion and fleshy anger.

In that light this article is a must read! (A Christian Response to ISIS) This is an extreme example, but what of those who are “enemies” of Christ in culture, politics, whatever? What would Jesus do? How would Jesus respond? We need to think and pray about that.

Continue reading “How Do We Present The Gospel?”