Saturday, July 2, 2011

A Holy Romance




“And they rose up in the morning early, and worshipped before the Lord, and returned, and came to their house to Ramah: and Elkanah knew Hannah his wife; and the Lord remembered her”  1 Sam 1:19


     I have always found this passage of scripture to be an excellent example of holy matrimony the way God intended it, an ideal to be strived toward in any marriage relationship.  For all you married couples, take special note of this scripture and apply it to the relationship with your spouse.
     Notice the order of events between the married couple Elkanah and Hannah.  First, they “rose up in the morning early together.”
     So often in today’s relationships, husband and wife lead such separate lives that they rarely get to spend time with one another.  Our culture esteems freedom and independence so much that when we see a happy couple in Love, always doing things together and spending a great deal of time with one another, we get sick to our stomach.  But really it is our own jealousy that makes us sick, for we all crave a relationship of Love, harmony, and unity—a relationship in which our partner knows us more intimately than we even know ourselves.  Elkanah and Hannah have this relationship. They look forward to spending time together, for they “rose up in the morning early together.”
      Sometimes when we think we have found true Love, when we think we have found our soul mate, we later realize that it was not Love at all that captivated us, but an unhealthy infatuation and preoccupation with another person.  Perhaps our infatuation caused us to idealize this other person to the point in which we had deceived ourselves—it was not Love at all, but our own selfish desires trying to fill that desperate void of loneliness in our heart.
     Many romantic relationships are doomed for failure or are severely limited because they are predicated on unhealthy infatuation and preoccupation.  The missing ingredient is not in anything one partner does or does not do, but in God Himself not being a part of the relationship.  Examine the relationship you are in: is God a part of that relationship?  In your failed or unhappy marriages of the past, did you and your spouse regularly commune with the Lord?
     Notice with Elkanah and Hannah, they not only get up early in the morning together to spend time, but they also include God.  They “worshipped” together as husband and wife.  I get warm and fuzzy feelings when I think about this.  How romantic!  It reminds me that his is exactly what I should be doing with my wife.
     We are called to Love Christ more than mother, father, sister, brother, child, spouse, etc. (Luke 14:26).  Christ is to be the center of our heart and universe.  The morning that husband and wife wake up early together and worship is a blessed morning indeed, an excellent way to start any day.
     Finally, and this is like dessert after a most delectable meal, Elkanah and Hannah made love together.  Notice they did not just roll over first thing in the morning and get busy.  They first woke up together early in the morning; then they worshipped the Lord together; and then finally, they made love.  Hannah, who had been praying for a child, went on to conceive the prophet Samuel.  Hannah’s elation and praise is often considered a prophetic scene that foreshadowed Mary’s rejoicing at the annunciation that she would bear the Messiah (compare 1: Sam 2:1-10 with Luke 1:26-55).
     So if you have had or are currently having trouble in a romantic relationship, consider whether God might be that missing element.  Perhaps you and your spouse could seek a relationship with Him together, just like Elkanah and Hannah did. 
     The Good News is that it is easy to get right with God.  He will accept you and your spouse exactly “as is,” wherever you are at in life.  You do not need to make dramatic self-improvements before coming to Him.  In fact, the opposite is true—first come to Him, and then He will empower you through His Spirit to make whatever changes He requires.  He will mold you and shape you as a potter does clay, if you but submit your will to Him.  For a relationship with God is the true Holy Romance that fulfills the heart, surpassing anything we could imagine in another person.  And, I guarantee you that you need not fear rejection in courting a personal relationship with Him, because the promise of scripture is:

“...him that cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out.”  John 6:37

Larry Word

The Belly



“…they that are such serve not our Lord Jesus, but their own belly…” Rom 16:18

“…they are enemies of the cross of Christ: Whose end is destruction, whose god is their belly, whose glory is in their shame, who mind earthly things” Phil 3:18, 19

“…who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator”
Rom 1:25


     What a harsh indictment!  If you have not accepted Christ into your heart, then your god is your belly, you serve the creature more than the Creator.  Does this sound like you?  Does your belly, the seat of man’s lower primordial nature, control you?  For if your heart has not yet been touched by Love, then your belly is your god, a consuming black hole preoccupied with food, sex, and sensual stimuli.  You live for pleasure because you have no purpose.  You trust your instinct because you do not know your intuition.  And you have no relationship with God, because you are spiritually dead, not even aware of yourself.
     Such is the state of the natural man, the self, the fleshly body.  We are born into sin, the soul fused into the Adamic nature.  Mystics speak of seven chakras, the chi or mysterious life-force energies that pervade through the body.  The lower chakras between the genitals and solar plexus—literally in the belly—are associated with the fleshly sin nature.  They control our biological drives and carnal appetites.  But Christ knocks on the door of the heart, inviting you into a covenant relationship and promising a new spiritual identity in Him.
     Upon receiving Christ, the black hole energies in the pit of the belly implode, giving rise to the opening of the lotus flower, the birth of a super nova in the heart:

“I Jesus… am the bright and morning star”
Rev 22:16

“… until the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts”
1 Pet 1:19

“… unto you that fear my name the Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings”
Mal 4:2

     Through a humble faith and a childlike trust in Christ, God quickens to life a new spiritual identity in the heart of the individual (Eph 2:5).  The soul is liberated from its bondage to the Adamic nature and placed into the collective body of Christ.  Christ, meanwhile, awakens the heart and permanently indwells the believer’s body as His temple (1 Cor. 6:19; 1 Cor 3:16).  One’s capacity for Love, empathy, and compassion increases in the regenerated person as he/she grows in a communal relationship with the Lord.
     The believer becomes a witness and ambassador for Christ on earth, giving testimony to their relationship and all the miracles wrought through them.  This is the victorious Christian life, where the believer shines as a light for others.  The belly, which was once served as “god,” becomes a wellspring of spiritual nourishment, the roots of the tree of life that pulsates Love and healing through the believer’s Christ-heart:

“He that believeth on me… out of his belly shall flow rivers of living waters (the Holy Spirit)”
John 7:38

     The Kingdom of God is within the heart.  Unfortunately, there are few that ever experience the victorious Christian life.  There are few that let their Christ-heart shine.  There are few that allow the Spirit of the Living God to work miracles through them.  For even most of us—we who have placed faith in Christ, experienced the Power of His  Resurrection, and borne the day star in the heart—fail  to attain the potential of the Spirit-filled life.  We easily revert back to the sin nature, its indulgences and the pleasures of the flesh.  Or we pursue a path of self-righteous living, failing to realize that morality is the result of spirituality, not the means to it.  Having been set free by the Truth, we become like the Israelites who would rather return to their bondage than enter into the promised land.  We become like that dog that happily returns to its own vomit (Prov 26:11).
     Part of the reason there is such difficulty living the victorious Christian life is that once a soul is converted for Christ, all hell breaks loose!  Demonic forces converge to wage war.  The old Adamic nature wrestles against the new spiritual identity.  Understanding just who it is that lives inside you and the Power He wields is the key to victory.
     People revert to their Adamic nature because they are more familiar with self than the Spirit of God.  They are pacified by pleasures (carnality) or puffed up with pride (self-righteousness).  But God calls us to die to self daily (1 Cor. 15:31).  We must deny that which we are most familiar with and stand in the battle fray.  We stand and we wait for the Lord to move; we stand, we wait, we show courage, and are not to flinch or blink.  We breathe slowly and deeply from the bottom of our belly and we speak from the center of the Christ-heart.  Forces of darkness are powerless against the shield of faith. Perfect Love casts out fear.
     Yield to the Power within you… Trust in His name.  Do not think about it; just commit yourself into his hands in total surrender.  Then, the Spirit of God will move through you, speak through you, and empower you to overcome.

“who is he overcomes but he who believes Jesus Christ is the Son of God”
1 John 4:4

     May the Love of God touch your heart and reveal the mystery and Power of His resurrection.  And, may your belly become that fountain of living waters, a wellspring of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.
                                                                                                                                Larry Word

Sunday, June 26, 2011

The Meaning Behind Your Name


“Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the Temple of my God… and I will write upon him the name of my God… and I will write upon him my new name” Rev 3:12

“…and thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name” Isa. 62:2

“To him that overcometh will I give… a new name which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it” Rev 2:17

“Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the son of God?” 1 John 5:5

     Have you ever considered the significance of a name?  With the exception of women who traditionally adopt their husband’s last names upon marriage, most people live their entire lives with only one name.  But who are we really?  Are we the names we have been conditioned to respond to, or is our heritage of a much higher calling?  Is our identity forged in the name itself, or does it transcend beyond this earthly existence?  For as surely as those who overcome are raised a new body, spiritual and eternal, so too has God promised every believer a new name in Christ.
     It is therefore not the name itself but the soul and spirit that make the essence of a person (1 Thes 5:23).  The names we are assigned at birth are as transient and temporal as the physical body, which returns to the dust upon death.  The first name represents the self, that unique individual person on earth.  The last name represents patriarchal bloodline, the families into which we are born.  But we are much more than our earthly names!  Our true names are hidden in God until we are reborn from the dead, raised a new resurrection body incorruptible and eternal (Col 1:18; John 3:3; Rom 8:29; Rev 2:17).
     When Jesus said you must be “born again” to see the Kingdom of God (John 3:3), the Greek text translated “born again” is “gennao anothen.”  The Greek verb “gennao” can be used for either the father or mother.  In Mathew 1:2 “gennao” is translated “begat,” as in “Abraham begat Isaac,” or “Abraham ‘gennao’ Isaac.”  When used of the father gennao means to “beget” or “engender.”  When used of the Mother it means to “conceive” or “bring forth into the world.”  Jesus is speaking of the Father when he said a man must be “gennao anothen.” (John 3:3 rendered “born again”).
    The word “anothen” can also be translated “from above” in John 3:3 rather than “again.”  Indeed, it is rendered “from above “ in many other passages of scripture (See John 1:31; 19:11; Math 27:51; Mark 15:38; Luke 1:3; James 1:17; 3:15; 3:17).
     Thus, to enter the Kingdom of God a man must be “gennao anothen,” meaning “begotten” or “engendered from above.”  Many Christians who believe they have been “born again” have really only been spiritually “begotten from above.”  The difference in terminology is important because it is at resurrection that we are truly “born again” from the dead (Co 1:18) and receive our spiritual bodies and new names.
     This does not mean to say that a change does not take place upon spiritual regeneration, the point at which one is “begotten from above.”

“For if any man be in Christ he is a new creation” (2 Cor. 5:17)

     At physical birth we enter this world with a living body and soul but a latent, dormant spiritual identity unconscious of God and incapable of a relationship with Him.  We are born spiritually dead, the consequence of Adam’s fall, also known as original sin.  We exit the womb a dichotomy (body, soul, latent/dormant spirit) but are potentially a trichotomy (body, soul, living spirit).  To activate the spiritual dimension of the inner person, one must be “gennao anothen,” or “spiritually begotten from above.”
     Spiritual regeneration can be compared to the human reproductive cycle.  When we are “begotten from above,” God’s Word is like sperm that penetrates the mind and heart, the very mentality of the soul, entering the body via the ear canal and resulting in faith (Rom 1:17).  Faith can also come as a revelatory gift from the Holy Spirit (Eph 1:17; Gal 5:22).
     It is through this faith that fertilization occurs and the new spiritual embryo germinates.  Similar to the female ovulation cycle, sometimes our minds and hearts are more receptive to God than at other times.  However, once fertilization occurs, there is no going back.  God quickens to life the dormant human spirit, what is referred to in Eastern philosophies as the opening of the heart chakra or energy center.  The individual becomes privy to a new spiritual awareness and higher understanding of Truth—Enter God Consciousness.
     This opens the door to a relationship with the Creator, the beginning of one’s spiritual journey.  The body becomes the ova of God, the Holy Grail of Christ, the vessel through which His Spirit moves.  And with the spiritual embryo, there is no such thing as abortion, miscarriage, or forfeiture of eternal life once received.  Salvation is eternally secured.  The earthly existence becomes the incubation period in which we may grow to spiritual maturity, eventually being reborn and renamed at the resurrection. 
     Marriage is another useful analogy to illustrate the new identity promised in Christ.  It is the restoration of harmony to duality, the perfect yin and yang relationship.  It is the balance of the masculine and feminine principles within.  This is the sacred marriage spoken of in alchemy: God and man in communion; spirit and soul consciously dwelling together at-one.  The transmutation of lead into gold was an allegory for the depraved and darkened soul becoming instantaneously purified through faith in Christ.  Love is that mysterious fifth element, the very essence of God, the philosopher’s stone spoken of by the ancients which makes transmutation possible.  That is how it has worked throughout the ages, faith results in the activation, restoration, and regeneration of the human spirit.
     In today’s age, since the resurrection of Christ some 2,000 years ago, the sacred marriage takes on an even greater meaning.  God is not only restoring the dead spiritual identity lost in Adam.  He is also reproducing Himself in humans, calling out a family of spiritual royalty after his own likeness.  The body is not only the egg for the restored human spirit, but is also the very temple of God Himself (1 Cor 3:16).  Prior to Christ God did not permanently indwell believers, promising to never leave or forsake them (Heb 13:5).  In Old Testament times, the Holy Spirit would come and go (Psalm 51:11).
     But nowadays the indwelling presence of the Lord permanently resides in the believer (2 Cor 6:16).  Unprecedented power to overcome the most adverse of circumstances or accomplish the loftiest of goals are now available to every believer.  Christ foretold that his followers would do even greater works than Him (John 14:12)!
     What God has in store for those who Love Him staggers the imagination, it is more than what we are capable of comprehending (1 Cor 2:9).  At the same time that God’s Holy Spirit quickens to life the dormant human spirit, the soul is baptized into the body of Christ, and Christ permanently indwells the believer’s body as His temple.  Enter the paradox—if you are in Christ, then Christ is simultaneously in you.

“Greater is He that is in you than He that is in the world.” (1 John 4:4)

     In today’s age, the sacred marriage transcends beyond spirit and soul, mind and heart, intellect and emotion.  In today’s age, the Holy Spirit and human spirit bear witness together (Rom 8:16), believer’s share the mind of Christ (1 Cor 2:16), and Christ permanently indwells the believer’s body.   We are a new spiritual species as a result of this union, God’s children through faith (2 Cor 5:17).
     Like a husband and wife in which the “two become one flesh” (Math 19:5), so too is it with our husband, Jesus Christ.  We share His body and He ours.  Though separate in individual part, believers collectively comprise one inextricable whole—the Body of Christ (1 Cor 12:27).  He is the head and we are His parts.  We are currently betrothed to Him in marriage, and the Holy Spirit is the sign of this pledge, similar to an engagement ring (2 Cor 1:22; Eph 1:14).
     When Christ returns, an actual marriage will take place in heaven (Rev 19:7; 20:5, 6).  As God’s wife, we adopt His last name, representing the new family to which we belong (Rev 3:12; 22:4; Isa 62:2).  As God’s newborn children, He provides us a new first name based upon the individual victories won during life and the resulting glory we brought Him in our earthly existence (Rev 2:17).
     As we grow deeper in intimacy with God, we come to see the many relationships we share:  God is our Spiritual Father, Our Nurturing Mother, Our Beloved Husband, Our Kinsman Redeemer, Our King on Earth, Our High Priest in Heaven; He is our Rock; Foundation, Light, Life; He is Master, Creator, Partner, Friend, Food, Savior, Provider, and Sustainer;  He is the ineffable Self-Existent One, the Great “I Am” who is most Holy and Blessed forever.  This is by no means an exhaustive list, but a few names, labels that help us understand what we have scarce capacity to receive:

“God is Love”   1 John 4:16

May the Lord add a blessing to the reading of His Word.

                                                               Larry Word