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For whom should I pray?

Posted by on Apr 30, 2015 in Prayer Perspective, Praying for America | Comments Off on For whom should I pray?

A week of worldwide fasting and prayer for the US begins today, April 30th, and will continue through May 6th. This fast was not called by Americans. Australian believers have sent out this alarm.

Because of that, I want to recycle several blog entries I wrote last year. At that time, God prompted me to shift my focus as I prayed for the nation. In short, I believe God showed me these four things for which to pray:

  • Pray for people to know what to do.
  • Pray for people to receive wisdom along with their knowledge.
  • Pray for those people to receive the boldness to step out in what they know to do.
  • Pray for those people to be filled with boldness to carry out their tasks to completion.

Originally posted last year (fourth in series):

First of all, then, I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men, for kings and all who are in authority 1 Timothy 2:1-2a, emphasis added

With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for all the saints, and pray on my behalf, that utterance may be given to me in the opening of my mouth, to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel… Ephesians 6:18-19, emphasis added

Pray for people to know what to do. This is what I heard from the Lord this year, early in April. He then let me know that He had been pouring insight and revelation across the nation and upon people of all walks of life and would continue to do so. His instructions to me involved praying for them to know what to do with the knowledge, truth, and insights they had gained.

We live in the time of which Daniel prophesied, when knowledge of all sorts is being revealed at increasingly enormous rates (see Daniel 12:4). Wherever you go, with whomever you speak, no matter the topic, knowledge is increasing, expanding, and exploding.

Information is in perpetual motion. It stops for no one. As soon as you start to acquire an elementary grasp of any component of current events, the whole thing divides and subdivides and morphs into something new. And as information explodes, lives are involved—multitudes of lives are affected, countless lives are changed—and all too often, lives are destroyed.

Pray for people to know what to do. Who are these folks? We need to know so we can pray for them.

Look at the lists the Lord provided for us in 1 Timothy 2 and Ephesians 6. They give a clear line up of those for whom we should pray.

Kings. Whoever has leadership over this nation and other nations needs to be covered by our prayers. Ask God to reveal to the heads of state what they are to do. God has a plan for them, and it is probably not going to look just like your plan for them. Here’s the truth of the matter: These men and women need to know what to do, and you need them to know what to do. When we cover them with prayer, they will more likely be influenced by God’s leading—even if they genuinely dislike the concept of yielding to the God of the Bible. Let God direct you in your prayers, showing you which leaders for whom to pray.

All who are in authority. Knowledge—information that others in high places want to keep hidden—has been pouring out on many in strategic positions these days. So much so that it’s not hard to imagine that these leaders are overwhelmed and swamped—their heads are spinning—in the torrents of ever-cascading information. In every position of authority is someone who needs to know what to do by the Spirit of God with all the information and revelation that is piling up around them. They need your prayers. You need them to know what to do. So pray as the Spirit of God brings someone—or an office or a position of authority—to your mind or heart. He will help you to pray for them. And it’s very likely that they will start to make better decisions—whether or not they know why.

All the saints. Paul told the Ephesians to be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for all the saints. The Ephesians were charged to be instant—ready and willing at a moment’s notice—to pray for their fellow Christians. He also instructed them to stay the course with this prayer-ready lifestyle—to persevere in it.

How do you discern which believer for whom to pray? You pray for the individuals that come to your heart or who cross your mind. Perhaps you have a dream about them or a random experience reminds you of them. Then pray. Your friend—or brother or sister in Christ—have need of God’s help. They need to know what to do, and you can stand in the gap for them. By the leading of the Holy Spirit, you can touch God on their behalf, and then He will touch them—and He will drop into them what to do as a result.

Pray on my behalf. The Apostle Paul wrote this, requesting prayer on his own behalf. Why? That utterance may be given to me in the opening of my mouth, to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel. Paul needed prayer so that God’s utterance—the knowing of what to say by the agency of the Holy Spirit—would be given to him whenever he opened his mouth. His desire was to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel. In order to fulfill this task given to him by God, he needed believers to pray for him so he could speak boldly the oracles of God. Without prayer coverage—although he was called and although he knew the gospel—he would be less effective.

Who is like Paul to you in your life? Even though you probably perceive them as spiritual giants who have it all together, your “Pauls” need your prayers. Your pastor, your Bible teachers, the visiting evangelists, the missionaries overseas, the Christian counselor you visit, the prayer group or Bible study leader, the radio, TV, or internet ministry, your mentors in the Lord, and even the person who led you to Jesus—they all need prayer. Anyone who points the way to eternal life in Jesus Christ needs prayer, so you never go wrong by praying for them to know what to do and what to say so that they’ll be bold with God’s boldness and effective in the power of the Holy Spirit.

And just a reminder: Even as Christianity itself has come under greater attack in this hour, all of the godly leaders mentioned above are likely experiencing an increase of the same kind of attack in their own lives and ministries. Pray for them. Let God lead you. As a result, they will be strengthened and helped, and the fruit that will abound to their account as a result of your prayer will abound to your account as well.

All men. Paul wrote to Timothy to pray for all men. That would include the good, the bad, and the ugly. If someone crosses your mind, pray for them. If someone blesses you, pray a thanksgiving prayer for them. If someone irritates, offends, misrepresents, or otherwise crosses you, pray for them. Instead of stewing, storm Heaven on their behalf. Trust God to direct you; all men (and women and boys and girls…and teens!) need to know what to do in this critical hour. When one of them appears on your “radar”—despite who they are—then they need your prayers. So many miraculous happenings start as a “random” thought planted in the heart of a person of prayer.

As you follow through with all prayer and petition, praying at all times in the Spirit…being on the alert with all perseverance and petition, the men and women for whom you pray will know what to do in their own realms of authority, expertise, and life; and God will be free to download His will into a culture that was heading off the edge of the cliff in their efforts to flee from Him. And then the glory of the Lord will be seen and honored once again.

May it be so, Lord Jesus! May it be so.

Dorothy

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That people know what to do…

Posted by on Apr 29, 2015 in Prayer Perspective | Comments Off on That people know what to do…

A call has come from Australia for believers around the world to join in prayer and fasting for America from April 30th through May 6th.

Because of that, I want to recycle several blog entries I wrote last year. At that time, God prompted me to shift my focus as I prayed for the nation. In short, I believe God showed me these four things for which to pray:

  • Pray for people to know what to do.
  • Pray for people to receive wisdom along with their knowledge.
  • Pray for those people to receive the boldness to step out in what they know to do.
  • Pray for those people to be filled with boldness to carry out their tasks to completion.

Originally posted last year (third in series):

Of the sons of Issachar, men who understood the times, with knowledge of what Israel should do, their chiefs were two hundred; and all their kinsmen were at their command. 1 Chronicles 12:32, emphasis added

The lion’s share of the shift in direction I received about praying for the nation was this: Pray for people to know what to do.

How simple is that! When you pray for others to know what to do, you don’t have to know the details yourself! You don’t have to have a clue what they should do. In fact, it’s often “cleaner” that way; you’re not dictating your own ideas to the Lord. You merely pray for them to get that knowledge from God—whether they know it’s from God or not. The results of them knowing what to do—all over the nation and at every level—will be God-results. And that’s what we must have.

The sons of Issachar, back in the days when David took the throne of Israel, were described as men who understood the times, with knowledge of what Israel should do. Such insight was more than likely used to help further the establishment of David’s kingdom; wherever there is an abundance of men who have God-imparted understanding of the times and know what to do, the establishment and expansion of truth, righteousness, justice, and peace can flourish.

Conversely, two verses in Proverbs 14 reveal an interesting thought: “When the righteous triumph, there is great elation; but when the wicked rise to power, people go into hiding” (verse 12, NIV), and “When the wicked rise, men hide themselves; but when they perish, the righteous increase” (verse 28, NASB). Consider this: the “culture of correctness”about which I wrote a couple of days agotends to target traditional and Christian thinkers and results in thrusting many into “ideological hiding” from anyone who might “out” them.

Men and women who know what to do by the wisdom given to them by the Spirit of God can be used by Him—whether or not they are aware of His involvementto tip the cultural scale in favor of righteousness, freedom, and peace.

I want to encourage you to be available to the Lord to pray for the groups and individuals that He puts on your heart. They need His knowledge to know what to do in this hour; therefore, they need your prayers. And frankly, we need them to know what to do!

I believe that God wants to move strongly throughout this nation at all levels and in all regions so that the ministry of reconciliation—winning men, women, boys, and girls to Jesus—can proceed and expand unhindered in this hour. This soul-reaching, soul-winning call is for each one of us. And to pave the way for the “more than you can ask or imagine” (see Ephesians 3:20) explosion of salvations which many believe is just around the corner, you and I are also called to stand in prayer for all men, kings and those who are in authority (see 1 Timothy 2:1-2). As we stand praying, we are to do so in the authority of Jesus Christ without wavering, listening for and heeding the promptings of the Holy Spirit. What a privilege it is to be part of such a historic time!

Blessings,

Dorothy

For if you remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place and you and your father’s house will perish. And who knows whether you have not attained royalty for such a time as this? Esther 4:14

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A shift in prayer direction

Posted by on Apr 28, 2015 in Prayer Perspective, Praying for America | Comments Off on A shift in prayer direction

From Australia a call has come for believers worldwide to fast and pray for America from April 30th through May 6th.

Because of that, I want to recycle several blog entries I wrote last year. At that time, God prompted me to shift my focus as I prayed for the nation. In short, I believe God showed me these four things for which to pray:

  • Pray for people to know what to do.
  • Pray for people to receive wisdom along with their knowledge.
  • Pray for those people to receive the boldness to step out in what they know to do.
  • Pray for those people to be filled with boldness to carry out their tasks to completion.

Written last year (second in series):  

When I wrote my book First of All, Pray: Prescription for a Nation in Crisis, I had been engaged in praying for the United States for over twenty years, often about elections, the president, and national security. During those two decades, I experienced some vivid dreams in which I interacted with each of three presidents—our current one and the last two. The dreams were all instructive as far as praying for each particular man and from those dreams, I got glimpses into each man’s thinking, motives, and behaviors at the time. Along with that, I gained some understanding of the spiritual obstacles surrounding the office which affected the ability of each Chief Executive to make sound decisions.

In February of 2008, I had been praying every week with a friend over the phone for the presidential election in November of that year. We had been praying together on this topic since the beginning of that year, and on the second Saturday of February, the Lord gave clear direction concerning how to pray for one of the candidates. I shared it with my prayer partner, and she agreed. However, the Lord neglected that evening to indicate to me which candidate to whom He was referring; at that point in time, three viable candidates were still running—one Republican and two Democrats. Of the three, one of them I was not fond of; one of them I didn’t trust at all; and the third I really knew nothing about, so I had no feelings one way or the other about that person.

All that next week, I prayed over the instruction God had given me. Then, when unbecoming information came out about one candidate in the middle of the week (the one of whom I was not fond), I asked the Lord, “Is this the candidate You were talking about?” Crickets. Nothing…except a sense of the Lord rolling His eyes at me. I deduced from this that the candidate of whom I was not fond was not the one the Lord had indicated.

Before I prayed with my prayer partner the next week, I realized that the Lord was referring to the candidate about whom I had no opinion. My friend confirmed that she sensed the same thing, so with that, we prayed according to instructions about the little-known candidate throughout the rest of 2008 until the election and even up to the inauguration. (Suffice it to say that ever since the second week of February, 2008, I had prayed according to Mark 4:22 and Luke 12:2.) That candidate became president; but although the outcome did not turn out as we had hoped, the directive still stood and continued to influence my prayer for the President as he took on the duties of office.

Early in April last year the Lord dropped a “shift” into my heart concerning the way I was to pray for America. He showed me that quite  a bit of the original prayer direction He had given had taken place. More would unfold as well, but now was the time to shift focus when I prayed for the nation.

Now my assignment was to simply pray for people to know what to do with the insight and revelation He was giving. The Lord wants to prepare men and women for appropriate action, and He intends for all of that action to be covered by  prayer—preferably before the actions take place so His will can be more perfectly accomplished.

Simple enough, right? Well, we are in the age of which Daniel prophesied—the age in which knowledge has increased and is continuing to expand exponentially (see Daniel 12:4). Therefore, although the charge to pray for humans to know what to do is easy enough, the Lord desires that His people not only pray big general prayers along this line, but He also wants us to be able to key in on specific groups and individuals by the Holy Spirit, according to the need, according to the moment, according to His will, and according to His prompting. And there are so many key individuals and groups in so many areas and walks of life, and the time is so critical that I believe the Lord wants all hands on deck, each one ready to pray whenever the Spirit of God drops His leading into their heart.

And I believe with all my heart that this shift in focus from God is not merely a have-to directive; it’s also a get-to directive. You and I get to participate with God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit in these outlandishly amazing times.

More tomorrow,

Dorothy

for it is God who is at work in you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure. Philippians 2:13

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Praying for the US

Posted by on Apr 27, 2015 in Prayer Perspective, Praying for America | Comments Off on Praying for the US

A call has gone out for believers worldwide to pray and fast for America. Those who have called for the fast have set apart April 30 this week through May 6. And the most fascinating thing about the call is this: it comes from Australia. Wise men and women across the globe realize that if the US fails in its unique global leadership role, the rest of the world will likely fall as well.

A year ago, in early April, I was minding my own business, just enjoying fellowship with the Lord, when He spoke something very clearly to my heart.

I posted what He showed me in a series last year, and I think it’s a good time to rerun it in preparation for the fast and during the time of prayer.

Before I do, however, I want to address an obstacle most of us face, not only when we reach out to the hurting people we meet every day, but also in living our day to day lives freely and unfiltered as generations of Americans have before us. This obstacle is the climate of “political correctness” in which we live. Another name for it would be “the fear of man.” It is that intense pressure that compels you to conform to the status quo, to not rock the boat, to avoid making anyone uncomfortable at all costs—especially if you long to inject Jesus or His Word into the conversation. The J.B. Phillips paraphrase of the New Testament describes this pressure from our “culture of correctness” as “the world around you squeezing you into its own mould” (see Romans 12:2, JBP). And, as the Apostle Paul urged, “Don’t let the world do that” (ibid).

The majority of believers are considerate and respectful to those around them; but due to our current climate, so many of us have become extremely cautious about what we say when it comes to our love for Jesus, morals, or biblical truth because we have been trained—steeped—in the consciousness of the new “right and wrong” in today’s culture. My witness might be “marred” if someone thought I had anything but acceptance toward societal standards and current trends, we may worry. Heaven forbid that someone would think I’m intolerant!

So here we are, in an age in which the power and wisdom of God are so desperately needed but are so defiantly “barricaded” or squelched. And since it is to this generation that we have been sent, we have a job to do—to boldly minister the power, wisdom, salt, and light of the gospel to all of them and to address the forces that seek to prevent this from happening.

All of us are called to be ministers of reconciliation (see 2 Corinthians 5:18), and all of us are called to stand firm against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places (see Ephesians 6:12), praying for all men, for kings and all who are in authority (see 1 Timothy 2:1-2). Without prayer for all men, kings, and all who are in authority in conjunction with standing firm against all the strategies of the enemy, the ministry of winning men and women to God through Jesus Christ gets squeezed into a bland worldly mould, becoming a mere shadow of its original power.

I believe this is why God is leading so many of you to cry out to Him on behalf of the United States now. This nation has been wonderfully instrumental in sending out hope, help, and the gospel to people all around the globe throughout her history, and Satan hasn’t liked it one bit. Therefore, the enemy has planted a big bull’s eye on America as he strategizes how to squeeze this nation economically, culturally, politically, educationally, and militarily. His goal is to silence her spiritually, morally, and ethically, in order to render any ministry of reconciliation—whether a large operation or small—weak, fearful, tepid, ineffective, and eventually extinct.

And so, I asked God last year if I could share the prayer directive He gave me then, and I received the go-ahead. His instruction is simple and allows you the lee-way to proceed as you feel led. This is not a “V-line of geese” type of prayer where one leads and everyone else follows; such prayer has its place, but our current situation in this nation requires all hands on deck and around-the-clock readiness, each one alert to pray about whatever drops into his or her heart at any given moment. (It’s that critical—a small blip on your “radar” prompting you to pray as you go through your daily routine may change the course of history: it may thwart a massive attack; it may save millions of lives; it may correct a huge error of judgment on the part of national or world leaders in the nick of time.) Your prayer can be private, quiet, short and sweet; it can be corporate, impassioned, and of long duration. Whatever, God wants to use all of us to affect the United States of America in prayer, and He’s ready for us to pray those prayers on her behalf.

If God has an assignment for you and me in prayer for this nation, then doesn’t that signify that He wants to answer that prayer as well? It is my hope that you will be encouraged to pray bold prayers for the United States of America. I believe that He is not through with us yet. Obviously, the Australians don’t think He is. 🙂

Stay tuned,

Dorothy

“For I know the plans that I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans for welfare and not for calamity to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will listen to you. You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart. I will be found by you,” declares the Lord. Jeremiah 29:11-14a

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James 5:19-20—In closing: Concerning those who have strayed

Posted by on Apr 24, 2015 in Prayer Perspective | Comments Off on James 5:19-20—In closing: Concerning those who have strayed

My brethren, if any among you strays from the truth and one turns him back,  let him know that he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins. James 5:19-20

  1. A believer is capable of straying from the truth.
  2. Other believers have the capacity to turn him back to the truth.
  3. The reward is in the knowing:
  •    If you turn someone from error, you will save his soul from death.
  •    You will cover a multitude of sins.

A believer is capable of straying from the truth. The bulk of James’ letter deals with the straying capacity of believers. On one hand, his letter is a warning to avoid detrimental lifestyle choices, and on the other, it is a corrective rebuke to those who have already entangled themselves in carnality. Because of this, I think of the book of James as a reality check.

Other believers have the capacity to turn straying ones back to the truth. Much of this letter deals with the tongue. The capacity to slip with the tongue seems to be the greatest area of vulnerability among believers. Therefore, James closes his letter by reminding his readers of the correct stance to take concerning those who have strayed from the truth: Seek to turn them back. Don’t spin your wheels by incessantly analyzing their falls and flaws with others; go to God and seek Him for their restoration. Make it your mission to win them back through prayer and godly behavior and words.

Don’t let it be said that you preferred dissecting your brethren to seeking their deliverance.

The reward is in the knowing. Let your greatest reward be this: Knowing that by your love, prayer, and self-restraint someone was restored to fellowship with Jesus. Knowing that someone is now blessed and living for Christ because of your prayers and refusal to belittle, bemoan, or besmirch them when they behaved badly is reward in itself.

…he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death…

Instead of broadcasting his error, you sought the Lord so he would turn from his error. And you obeyed God as you interacted with this one. As a result, he did not run further away from the Lord but was wooed and won back to Him by your steadfast, loving presentation of the Truth—demonstrated by both your words and your deeds. Because of your caring involvement, he has been spared devastating loss on that Day.

…and will cover a multitude of sins.

Though his sins stacked up like a pile of rotting carcasses, by of your gracious intervention, those sins have been covered. They no longer weigh him down or pollute the very atmosphere around him. They are buried and are no longer attached to him—or to his account.

It is fitting that James ended such a corrective letter in this way. As he closed, he refocused his brethren, ensuring that they would make adjustments among themselves with clean hearts and right motives.

I pray we embrace the wisdom in this short letter and be empowered to walk in it before the Lord for the rest of our lives. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Dorothy

Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified. 1 Corinthians 9:26-27

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The Suffering Servant—Easter Series Part 1

Posted by on Mar 24, 2015 in Prayer Perspective | Comments Off on The Suffering Servant—Easter Series Part 1

Behold, My servant will prosper, He will be high and lifted up and greatly exalted. Just as many were astonished at you, My people, so His appearance was marred more than any man and His form more than the sons of men. Thus He will sprinkle many nations, kings will shut their mouths on account of Him; for what had not been told them they will see, and what they had not heard they will understand. Isaiah 52:13-15

As I was researching the prophecy in Isaiah about the sufferings of the Messiah on behalf of mankind, I discovered something I never knew before. I learned that there are four sections in the book of Isaiah commonly known as “The Servant’s Songs”. They are:

  • Isaiah 42:1-4 about the chosen Servant
  • Isaiah 49:1-6 about the mission of the Servant
  • Isaiah 50:4-9 about the steadfast, obedient Servant
  • Isaiah 52:13-15 through Isaiah 53:1-12 about the suffering Servant

Jesus was that Servant. He was the chosen Servant (see Isaiah 42:1). He was the Servant given the mission to redeem Israel and all the nations of the earth (see Isaiah 49:6). He was the obedient Servant even in the face of being struck and having His beard pulled out (see Isaiah 50:5-6). And He was the suffering Servant, submitting unto death, even the death of the cross (see Philippians 2:8).

Behold, My servant will prosper…

God’s Servant would prosper. This kind of prosperity had far more to do with prudence, wisdom, and spiritual impact than it did with acquiring great wealth. However, as you view the span of twenty centuries since Jesus’ death and resurrection and consider all of the souls He has since rescued from a fiery, destitute eternity—millions upon millions of us—possibly billions—each one of us is a bounty credited to His account. His scale tipped over a long time ago, and more and more souls are still being heaped up upon it every day. He has indeed prospered.

He will be high and lifted up and greatly exalted.

This verse speaks of the honor and exaltation this Servant would so richly deserve. Ironically, it also speaks of the manner by which He would die—high and lifted up on the cross at Calvary. “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up” (John 3:14; see also Numbers 21:8-9).

Just as many were astonished at you, My people…

This indicates both the historical hatred toward the nation of Israel and God’s miraculous intervention time and again—in the face of that hatred—on their behalf.

…so His appearance was marred more than any man and His form more than the sons of men.

Like the race to which He was born, Jesus would be hated. His appearance, or visage, would be marred more than any man to the utter disfigurement of His face. His form—His shape, outline, or figure (see http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/Lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?strongs=H8389&t=KJV)—would likewise experience disfiguring beatings to a far greater extent than that sustained by any man. And all of this took place after His arrest and before He even reached the cross.

Thus He will sprinkle many nations…

This was His mission. His blood was shed on behalf of many nations—for Israel first and for the rest of the world as well—for whosoever would believe on Him.

“Sprinkle” is an interesting word. The word used here is not a gentle, delicate thing such as I received when I was “baptized” as a seven-month-old—a bit of water was sprinkled on my forehead as I grabbed at the minister’s black-rimmed glasses. No, the Hebrew word is nazah and means to spurt and spatter as well as to sprinkle (see http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/Lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?strongs=H5137&t=KJV). Think opened arteries. They don’t sprinkle. They spurt. Opened veins ooze—not a little, but copious amounts of blood.

As Jesus’ blood spurted and spattered throughout His agonizing trial and crucifixion, nations were being sprinkled by His blood. The way was being inaugurated for whosoever would believe in Him to enter through the veil—that is, His torn flesh—to be cleansed from their sin and receive everlasting life (see Hebrews 10:19-20).

…kings will shut their mouths on account of Him…

The day will come when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father (see Philippians 2:10-11). On that day, man’s agendas will cease; man’s wisdom will be silenced; kings will shut their mouths. Everything will be summed up in Christ (see Ephesians 1:10).

for what had not been told them they will see, and what they had not heard they will understand.

This gospel must be preached to all the nations (see Mark 13:10). There may be individuals among the nations who never hear; others will be among those of whom Jesus spoke: “Though seeing, they do not see; though hearing, they do not hear or understand” (Matthew 13:13, NIV); the truth just doesn’t register with them. But a third category of humanity is the group spotlighted in this verse—those who did not know the gospel, but upon its entrance into their lives, they both see and understand the good news of salvation. Many of us are in that group.

Every man, woman, and child who has ever lived throughout the earth’s long, rolling generations, will one day see and understand the truth about the Servant who came to suffer and die for them.

May God help those of us who are privileged to know this truth to live our lives with one main purpose in mind—that multitudes more will see and understand the message of the Suffering Servant—Jesus—on this side of eternity.

Dorothy

As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up; so that whoever believes will in Him have eternal life. John 3:14-15

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