If Jesus Can?

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Jesus casts a demon out of a boy

"O unbelieving generation," Jesus replied, "how long shall I stay with you? How long shall I put up with you? Bring the boy to me." So they brought him. When the spirit saw Jesus, it immediately threw the boy into a convulsion. He fell to the ground and rolled around, foaming at the mouth.Jesus asked the boy's father, "How long has he been like this?"

"From childhood," he answered. "It has often thrown him into fire or water to kill him. But if you can do anything, take pity on us and help us."

"'If you can'?" said Jesus. "Everything is possible for him who believes."
—Mark 9:19-23 NIV

If you've been following along with the McCheyne Bible reading program, you will have encountered this passage in the last few days. The NIV translates that last verse differently than most other versions, but I like the way it reads in that translation. It drives the point home.

"'If you can'?" said Jesus.

When I picture this encounter, I can see Jesus taken aback. He looks at the father of this demonized child with an unverbalized question spanning His face, Did he just say what I thought he said? It's not hard to envision Jesus shaking his head in response. O unbelieving generation….

Nothing has troubled me more in the last few years than the truth that we American Christians sound too much like the boy's father in this passage from Mark. "If" crops up repeatedly in our prayers. It's a carefully placed word—a qualifier that serves as our out when things don't go as planned. A convenient way of not being disappointed with God when the answer to our prayers is not what we'd hoped.

But who is the disappointing one here? The Lord or us? Is His response "A few things are possible for him who believes" or is it a more forceful answer?

Why then do we believe for so little? Why do we let our eyes tell us what is real rather than letting Christ reign?

In my post about the miraculous stories surrounding the revival occurring in India, a commenter said that she longed for them to be true. That broke my heart. I think it should break the heart of every person in America who claims to be a Christian. What's so damning about the truth behind that statement is that it doesn't have to be that way. We don't have to settle for crumbs from the Master's table. Adding the qualifier "if" is the primary reason we are where we are.

The father of the boy answers Jesus one verse later:

Immediately the boy's father exclaimed, "I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!"
—Mark 9:24

Immediately. Did we catch that? The father knew he'd underestimated Jesus and immediately saved face. His petition is instructional.

How much do we believe for great things from God? Shouldn't our daily prayer be that Christ in His fullness overcome our unbelief? Or are we content with Jesus looking into our eyes and wondering how we can believe for so little?

If Jesus can? Of course, He can!

What Christians in India Are Facing Soon

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Christians persecuted in IndiaI don't know where I got the link to Chandrakant Chavada's blog, but I've been gratefully following the stories he writes of revival in India. The Holy Spirit is moving in power there, with healings, miracles, and transformed lives. I've been reading his blog for a couple months now and wanted to tell everyone who reads Cerulean Sanctum of one particular post he put up late last month.

In "Conversion By Force," Chandrakant tells of an upcoming initiative in India to persecute Christians by forcing them to recant their faith in Christ. This diabolical program is set to start February 11. A half million Indians have volunteered to perpetrate this injustice on their own countrymen, on those who have joined the growing Christian population in India.

So I'm putting out a call to all the readers of Cerulean Sanctum to pray that the Lord will totally thwart the plans of those who are hoping to force Christians in India to recant their faith in Christ. I would also ask that those of you who have a blog get the word out on this gross attempt to destroy the lives of our fellow Christians. But most of all, be praying for the persecuted Church in India.

Thank you.

Tags: India, Persecution, Revival, Holy Spirit, Church, Faith, Christianity, Jesus, God

Tozer on Testing the Spirits

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Aiden Wilson TozerIngrid over at Slice of Laodicea clued me in to outstanding wisdom by my favorite Christian author, A.W. Tozer, on the topic of how to try the spirits to see if they are of God. This excerpt comes from Man—The Dwelling Place of God, one of the few books of his I have not read. The entire book appears free of charge online—what a blessing!

With spiritual discernment so lacking in some parts of the American Church today, Tozer’s words—as always—are the kind of floodlight that makes truth more clear.

Essential reading.