Seeking Truth

The Word of God is both, a skillful scalpel and a mighty sword.

Talking of God’s Word today friends. Speaking of which, I humbly realise that no matter how much we say, it will never be enough.

But I told Jesus I’d try.

Thanks for your time.

Let me start with the story I believe He laid on my heart last evening as I began to churn with creative ideas for this post. If you have spent some time studying God’s Word, you may be familiar with the story of Elijah and the widow of Zaraphath recorded in 1 Kings 17. If not, no sweat. I’ll break it down for you.

Ready?

Elijah, friends was a prophet of the Lord in Old Testament times. When the nation of Israel became rebellious and idolatrous by worshipping gods other than Yahweh, the net result was not only moral decay but also the inevitable circumstantial consequences that followed their disobedience towards the Lord.

Led completely astray under the leadership of Ahab, an extremely evil king; Israel found itself in grave trouble. That was when Elijah stepped onto the scene and prayed for the Lord to shut up the heavens to get the people to a point of realisation and repentance so that they could be restored.

So what culminated as a result was a drought which lasted three and a half years. Even at great personal cost, Elijah put the purpose of God at the center of His life and persevered to see Israel turn around.

Israel eventually did and the drought was lifted. But that’s not the point of this story.

The point of this story is the power of God’s Word.

“So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; It shall not return to Me void, But it shall accomplish what I please, And it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it.”

(Isaiah 55:11, NKJV)

During the drought, Elijah was supernaturally supplied with food and water. The Lord sent him to a place where Elijah drank from a brook while God arranged for ravens to bring him bread and meat in the morning + evening.

However, the brook soon dried up.

But the good news is that the provision of the Lord did not.

The Lord commanded Elijah to go to a place called Zaraphath where God said He had already commanded a widow to supply him with food.

I am sure Elijah must have been surprised at this because widows in that time were presumably poor. Yet, how often do we see God provide instruction in a way that perhaps makes no sense in the given moment?

A test of faith.

Elijah’s story testifies.

Zaraphath was devastated by the onslaught of drought and famine. Starvation threatened the lives of people. These were indeed some desperate times, friends. And to top it all, God decides to send Elijah to a poor widow for provision.

Elijah at this point I believe summoned all his courage and asked the poor widow who did not even have enough firewood and was found by him collecting sticks.

Yet, Elijah did as he was told.

As the poor widow told Elijah that all she had was only a handful of flour in a jar and a little olive oil in a jug which she was preserving for her last meal to be had with her son, preparing thereafter to die; Elijah audaciously interrupted her plans.

He told her that before she could cook a meal for herself and her son, she would first make a loaf of bread for him.

It was a request, actually. A very bold one.

What prompted him to say this, I hear you ask.

The Word of the Lord.

“For this is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: ‘The jar of flour will not be used up and the jug of oil will not run dry until the day the Lord sends rain on the land.'”

(1 Kings 17:14)

God promised Elijah a never-ending supply of provision from a tiny jar of limited flour and a tiny jug of limited water.

And so it was.

“For the jar of flour was not used up and the jug of oil did not run dry, in keeping with the word of the Lord spoken by Elijah.”

(1 Kings 17:16)

Friends, whether I see it in the case of Jesus multiplying the two fish and five loaves of bread in the New Testament so much so that there were twelve basketsful of provision even after the crowd had eaten, or in the case of Elijah and the widow of Zaraphath in the Old Testament having more than enough to fill their stomachs even in the midst of an impossible drought and famine situation; one truth stands out to me:

Our limited resources when entrusted into the eternal hands of our Multiplying Master become a superabundant supply of God’s riches.

For our limitations are His opportunity.

All we need is a Word from the Lord.

Because the Word of the Lord goes forth like a mighty sword to manifest that which He has spoken and pull down strongholds that are contrary to His will.

It is designed and anointed to contradict, challenge and change the state of our circumstances.

Till our circumstances are brought into alignment with His will.

For His will is revealed through His Word.

Our part, friends in God’s story is to believe, receive and steward His Word.

For this is what God says to us,

“Open your mouth with a mighty decree;
    I will fulfill it now, you’ll see!
    The words that you speak, so shall it be!”

(Psalm 81:10, TPT)

Father God encourages us to speak His Word, friends.

To boldly declare it as a mighty sword in our mouth that is able to pull down strongholds in oppositional circumstances till our circumstances begin to align with the truth of that which He has spoken and the realm of His Kingdom is made manifest.

On Earth as it is in Heaven.

That is what God’s Word does in the context of our circumstances. But what about the condition of our hearts, friends?

Our inner world matters.

“For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved.”

(Romans 10:9)

God’s Word, friends falls first on the ground of our hearts. So it is important that our hearts be soft and supple so that they can easily receive and believe what He is desiring for us to hear and implement.

But that is really not how we start with Jesus.

Because above all else, Jesus invites us to come to Him, just the way we are. Bound and shackled up. Shamed and discounted. Hurt and heartbroken. Hard and bitter.

He doesn’t really care how much of baggage we are dealing with, as long as we are willing to humbly surrender it all to Him and watch Him do what only He can do.

“Not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit”

(Zechariah 4:6)

For the Lord is famous for taking the broken and fragmented pieces of our lives, and weaving them all together in the masterful way that only He knows to, ultimately resurrecting a master piece from the inside and out so that it brings glory to His Name.

Well known evangelist, Christine Caine often says,

“Your history does not define your destiny. You can start bad and finish good in and through a relationship with Jesus Christ.”

Our God is truly a miracle working God, friends.

He takes our brokenness and gives us wholeness in exchange. He translates our pain into purpose and brings beauty from ashes. He heals the anger and bitterness in our hearts by teaching us to forgive. He promises us justice as we agree to put our trust in Him. In fact, the Bible calls him the Restorer of Broken Dwellings. So it shouldn’t surprise us when He starts with first holistically healing and restoring the broken condition of our hearts, minds, bodies and souls for New Testament says that now we are His holy temple, the habitation of His Spirit.

“Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God?”

(1 Corinthians 6:19-20)

We are now His beloved children, holy and blameless in His sight. And guess what every good father cares about when it comes to His kids?

Their peace, their joy, their hope.

And anything that interferes with the kind intentions of God is dealt with.

Foremost of which, are the lies that we have believed, friends which affects the ground of our hearts.

Yes. It’s true.

Lies that we have believed about the nature and character of God. Lies about ourselves and our identity in Him. Lies about the world that we are called to touch and transform.

Lies designed by the enemy to keep us in deception and bondage.

But Christ came to set us free.

“So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.”

(John 8:36)

So where do we turn to receive Truth that is able to set us free, remains a valid question.

The Word of God.

“For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”

(Hebrews 4:12, ESV)

God’s Word consists of Truth that are words anointed by His Holy Spirit, possessing the power to pierce and heal with the surgical precision of a scalpel.

It completely counters the lies of the enemy, reveals the authentic heart of God and brings His children into the light.

The light of the true nature and character of God, the light of our true identity in Him and the light of the truth about the world we are called to touch and transform.

The Aramaic language calls it, “noohrah” – the revelation light of God as well as the glory light of Christ.

This is the light of God, friends that pierces the dark, dismantles lies, reveals Truth and sets the captives free.

The light of God which sees us as a chosen people, a royal priesthood and a holy nation – forgiven and redeemed as the righteousness of God in Christ.

The light of God which deems us radically loved, fully known, carefully understood and deeply valued as the very family and household of God.

The light of God which draws a line in the sand through the blood-stained path of Calvary and demarcates between the counterfeit roar of the enemy (fear or intimidation) and the holy roar of the Lion of the tribe of Judah (Perfect Love which casts out all fear and breeds inner rest, deep assurance and complete security).

Psalm 36:9 says it well,

“For with you is the fountain of life; in your light we see light.”

The power of the Word of God.

Both, as a skillful scalpel and a mighty sword.

Where can you apply the Truth of God’s powerful Word today, friend?

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