The Word of God by Val Dodd

WE BELIEVE that the Bible is God’s Word to the world, speaking to us with authority and without error. (2 Tim. 3:16-17)

Each time a person picks up a Bible, he or she opens the grandest message ever given to earth. Nothing has ever come to the hands of humankind that even approaches that completeness and clarity or the love and grace presented in God’s Word.

 Exceeding any of its other superlative qualities is the Bible’s unique, multi-dimensional power.  The Bible breathes with truth that is proven in its power to set human beings free.

The Bible transforms individual men and women trapped in any and every order of human failure, lifting them from selfishness and sin to dignity and destiny by the power of the grace it reveals.  And the Bible heals the human soul through its unparalleled ability to communicate and infuse love into and through human nature by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Truth, grace and love abound here—but the power that attends and actuates them is the dynamic difference in the Bible’s message.  Of all the writings that have affected human thought and behaviour, the Word of God stands alone in this respect: received in faith, it is “word with power“.  (Jack Hayford.)

As in past times, there is an all out attack on the word of God from outside and oft times well meaning people inside the body of Christ, write books about their latest musings on Heaven, Hell, Sin, our Tolerance etc and because of our fast media can bring, at times, confusion to many which brings with it brokenness, bitterness and battles.

I also see many people talking about the latest `Twilight Movies` and see some Christian young people carrying the books as if they contain life in them.

 The question I want to pose to all of us is this, “Are we still in love with Jesus and His Word,  or have we lost the value of the Word of God as our guide in our families, our homes, our businesses, or do we just keep it until Sundays in our Churches or at conferences?”

The Word says to imprint the Word of God on our Children’s hearts and to write it on the door frames of our homes as a way of Life.

  • In Deut 6:4 Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one.  5 Love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. 6 These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. 7 Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. 8 Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. 9 Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates. 

 

What happens to us when we open the Bible or Word of God, do we have the same expectation and excitement as when we were first saved and began to read of the Fathers love for us or do we now read it out of duty?

At times it is like our marriages when they become dutiful and a coldness of heart creeps in, we have to intentionally seek revitalization, rejuvenation and renewal of our love and vows. 

My prayer: Lord, give me back my hunger, excitement, expectation and love for your Word and the revelation it will bring.  Bring me back to my first Love.  Amen.

Father’s Heart Christian Fellowship by Ron & Renee Grochowski

It was the year 2000.  We had moved from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the Lower Peninsula town of Alpena for employment purposes.  We attended New Life Christian Fellowship while there and were gloriously immersed into the River and introduced to the Love of the Father at TACF in Toronto.  In January of 2003, I (Renee) attended the four week “Father’s Heart School” with Jack Frost, Ed Piorek, the Jacksons, the Jordans and John and Carol Arnott.  It was truly a life-changing experience.  Since then our hearts’ cry was to take the message of the Love of the Father north to our home in the Upper Peninsula and the precious people who live there.

After returning to Ishpeming in the fall of 2004, we soaked in God’s Word and in His Presence for many months, seeking direction.  We were led to Nehemiah and received the word to “Arise and Build”.  We then started meeting in our home to share the love of the Father.  We rented township halls, gathered in motel rooms and borrowed other churches to hold conferences and training meetings. 

We became members first of Friends In Harvest and then of Partners In Harvest in November of 2007.

In June of 2009 a dear saint, who wishes to remain anonymous, said that he had been watching us and our growth and believed that we were “good ground”.  He gave us a gift of cash to purchase three North Lake school buildings that had sat vacant for 12 years. Before the papers were even signed we had a team from North Carolina in one of the buildings, training and equipping the saints in the region. 

God has decreed that we be a resource center, a watering hole, for the Upper Peninsula and beyond.  Since we’ve acquired the buildings, we’ve had many ministers and leaders from the larger Body of Christ come here to pour into us and the region.

In June of this year a small crew of amazing, missionary minded brothers and sisters from several churches from the Lower Peninsula came along side of us and assisted in cleaning out the unoccupied main brick school building.  They removed thirteen tons of debris from two of the floors!  There is much work yet to be done to prepare it for the next phase of the renovation.  We at Father’s Heart believe that the Lord would like to see it occupied in the very near future and used as a Leader’s School and Training Center for the whole region.  We also see it being used as a Conference Center.

Because of the amazing love of God, Father’s Heart Christian Fellowship is only the first of many PIH churches that will dot the landscape across the beautiful, rugged Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  It is our prayer that He be glorified in and through His Church to our state, region and to the ends of the earth.

Ron & Renee Grochowski pastor Father’s Heart Christian Fellowship in Ishpeming, MI.  Ron is a Civil Engineer and still owns and operates his own Engineering and Building business and Renee is a a former Registered Nurse.  They have three married children and eight beautiful grandchildren, all residing in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

The Power of the Godhead by Duane Siemens

We believe there is one God who lives forever in three persons; the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. (Math 28:13)

The concept of  God dwelling eter­nally in three Persons has inspired awe and wonder in the heart of man, enlightening, enriching and elevating his view of Al­mighty God. The view of God that has been held by Christians for the last 2,000 years is that he exists as three persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit – not that there are three separate Gods, nor that he is one God wearing three different hats – but that there is only one God who exists as three distinct Persons.

That God exists in three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, is the only basis on which the Christian doctrine of redemption can be intelligently set forth. Hence, the revelation concerning the plurality of Persons in the Godhead is not given for the mere purpose of presenting something which shall be puzzling to human minds, but as a necessary step in the much fuller revelation concerning the plan of salvation.

A good beginning point here is to note the number of passages in the New Testament that mention all three persons of the Trinity together, often within the space of either one or two verses. The following are a few such passages.

Matthew 28:19: “Go ye therefore, and teach all na­tions, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.”

Luke 1:35: “The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God.”

Romans 1:1, 3, 4: “. . . The gospel of God, . . .concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was . . . declared to be the Son of God with power, ac­cording to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead.”

Romans 15:30: “Now I beseech you, brethren, for the Lord Jesus Christ’s sake, and for the love of the Spirit, that ye strive together with me in your prayers to God for me.”

2 Corinthians 13:14: “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen.”

The very fact that so many passages can refer to each of the three persons of the Trinity, with each having a distinctive role in our salvation and growth is the strongest possible evidence that the Holy Spirit is distinct from God the Father, just as Jesus is distinct from God the Father.

The following passages are particularly significant:

At the baptism of Jesus we read, “…he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting on him. And a voice from heaven said, ‘This is my Son, whom I love…’”(Matthew 3:16:17). Note that the Spirit descends on Jesus to empower him for his public ministry, while God the Father speaks from heaven. This speaks of the amazing unity and personal impact each one of them has on us today.

Jesus’ final commands to his disciples, recorded in Matthew’s Gospel, includes the command to baptise converts, “in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:19). Baptism signifies our participation of dying to self and living connected to a divine family.

One writer, puts it this way:

Our prayer is not making conversation with God. It is joining the conversation that is already going on in God. It is being invited to participate in the relationships of intimacy between the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. There is an eternal dance already in full swing, and we are caught up in to it. Prayer is allowing ourselves to join the dance and experience the movements, the constant interplay of the Persons of the Trinity. 

“May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all” (2 Corinthians 13:14). Here is one of the clearest references of the three Persons of the Godhead, each of whom is designated by that special ministry that belongs to him.

John the Baptist taught them about the Holy Spirit even before Jesus appeared (Matt. 3:11; John 1:32-34).  Jesus referred to God as “Father” 181 times, and later the disciples called Him “Father” 78 times, and not once is He confused with, or called “Jesus” or “the Holy Spirit.”

Though each of the Persons of the Trinity exercises a different role in meeting our needs and preparing us for future glory, these roles often overlap. They exist in a unity of love, and all their purposes towards us are achieved in harmony with one another. All this points strongly to the fact that God himself is not only personal, but exists in relationships. Jesus himself declared that the unity of love that he desires the church to demonstrate to the world should be patterned on the unity that existed between him and God the Father (John 17:20,21).

If we, in our relationships, are meant to demonstrate the character of God, then the idea of the Trinity provides a very good explanation of what real relationship is all about!