“The Veil Has Been Torn” – Brandon Lee
This was written by Brandon Lee.
“You know how in the Old Testament, there was the Holy of Holies?
There was a veil separating anyone (except the appointed priest… once a year) from “entering” the very presence of God.
The average Joe could not “encounter” the presence of God.
So…. remember what happened on the cross? The veil, that separated the normal people from God, was torn so that we could all have constant access to what an Old Covenant, holy priest only had access to once a year. (Matthew 27:51)
If you say things like, “the presence of God was there”, or “God was in that place”, or “God showed up”, you have actively created a mindset that puts God back into that room behind a veil.
HE LIVES IN YOU.
You have become the Holy of Holies.
You have become the Most Holy Place.
You have become the temple in which He resides. (1 Cor 6:19)
You have become one spirit with Him. (1 Cor 6:17)
You have been hidden in Him. (Col 3:3)
He is living in you. (Gal 2:20, Col 1:26-27)
You are constantly in His presence. Do not wait to go to a building to become aware of it.
God doesn’t “show up”. He was always there. The only thing that changed was that you became aware of it and actually dared to believe Him at his word, “I will never leave you”, “greater is He that is in you than he that is in this world”, “if God is for us, who can be against us?” (Heb 13:5, 1 John 4:4, Rom 8:31).
Do not trade a lifestyle for watered-down, centralized, program-based, event-based religion.”
For more on this, read the book of Hebrews.”
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“Pogo Stick Jesus” – Ralph Harris
This was written by Ralph Harris. It is phenomenal.
“One of the most hurtful beliefs I have seen plaguing the sons and daughters of God is The Pogo Stick Jesus Syndrome.
Are you familiar with the recreational toy? As a boy I’d set my feet on the pedals and grab hold of the handle bars, thinking that maybe I could even spring over my dad’s car if only I could get enough bounce on my pogo. I had a lot of fun, except when I got a little sideways and ended up in the thick hedge along our driveway.
“Ralph, why is your shirt torn?” my mother asked. “Ah, my pogo threw me in the hedge,” I answered. With a nod of her wise head, my mother concluded, “Maybe you should take it easy on that thing.”
In the years since, I have often found that many have a sort of pogo stick relationship with God. Do the right thing, and God is in their life along with all of His benefits. Do the wrong—let a swear word drop, raise your voice in anger, give in to lust or greed or envy—and He’s out. Pogo stick Jesus. However, you could get Him to pogo back in response to a proper repentance, a public re-dedication, or a heartfelt re-commitment and tah-dah! God and favor restored.
Although many failed to get the hang of the pogo stick Jesus game and gave up on Christianity (as if!), some learned to live a sin-focused life of repentance. I’m not kidding. In essence their behavior and their ability to regulate it determined God’s level of comfort and happiness with them—and His presence and blessing. If either went missing, one had only to figure out what offense had sent Him pogo-ing away. This marvelous pogo stick theology made them responsible for God and accountable to themselves. “Did I blow it? Has God left me? How have I upset my sensitive God and frustrated His plan for my life?”
I don’t mean to imply that pogo stick Christians are foolish or stupid—they’re not! I do want to save them from a deception which denies the grandeur of the gospel and the greatness of the new covenant, and which robs them of resting in Christ. There is no rest when one is trying to bring to pass what God already has!
To be blunt (merciful?), sin is no longer the defining aspect of our relationship with God—Christ is! Grace is! God did away with sin, yours and mine, by the sacrifice of His son. We have been brought into union with Him and nothing, NOTHING can separate us from Him ever again. He has already given us every good gift and perfect fullness in Christ. What’s left out of every and fullness? God has made His home in you and in me, and He will never, NEVER withdraw Himself or forsake us. He has made us righteous royalty in His family, and even if our radiant robes should drag in the mud of this world, like the father of the prodigal, He will never lawyer-up and prosecute us for waywardness or distant country visitations.
Has it struck you that the prodigal’s father never even asked a question of his returning pig crap encrusted son? Not one! There was no interrogation. Nothing had changed about his father and what he knew to be true of his son. The only thing different was that the son was home where dad could again lavish himself upon him.
While the son might have believed the lie that his terrible behavior and return home would change the way his father treated him, would throw the farm into shocked chaos and force his father to make a harsh and disciplined example of him (early pogo stick theology), his dad was unaffected—except for the party! In my view, the only protestor of such unparalleled largesse was the elder brother religionist. “He can have his hollow party. I’m going to earn mine.”
The lie of religion suggests that while God has already given us everything in Christ, we might have lost a little of the all we never earned—here’s how to get it back. Slaves are made in the here’s how. So evil and destructive is this suggestion that the apostle Paul made a wish for those who spread the lie (Gal 5:12).
The lie says, “Well, yes, but it doesn’t come with an unlimited warranty. Here’s what you’ve got to do to keep up your end of the deal.” Do you recognize it? In two words, that’s pig crap!
Our Father tore up the records and every regulation! No debt remains—we cannot pay Him back, neither does He want it. That would be insulting to Him and the staggering display of His love and grace, which He still likes displaying. It’s His thing! It’s the new covenant. (And our Father asks no questions!) At the risk of adding to the story, the prodigal’s father threw a parade in front of the nasty neighbors as if to say, “He’s MY son! He is for me, and I’ll give him all that I want no matter how scandalous it seems to you!”
“He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took it away, nailing it to the cross. And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross.” (Col 2:13-15, italics mine.)
Essentially, the good news is this: He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification (Rom 4:25). If you believe that by bringing your sins before God you’ll get Him to pay great attention to them, think again, pogo stick breath. He already did. And He’s pretty satisfied and happy with what He has done about sin. If you believe that behaving perfectly will earn favor with God that would otherwise be threatened, think again. You’ve got Jesus on a pogo stick.
He’s not there. He’s settled and happily at home in a lavish environment—He’s in you.” – Ralph Harris
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The Phenomenon of “Push & Pull” Worship – John Stolwyk
Reposted this from John’s facebook page.
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I have made an observation in what is traditionally called “the worship service” what I call push and pull worship.
Let me define it basically like this: It is an attempt of “believers” to exalt the already exalted Christ so as to proclaim His otherness and distance from us because He is holy and exalted and we somehow are not or not to the same extent.
This is called the push or pushing God away from us. This is manifested via thoughts and phrases that purport our unworthiness and sinfulness and His “distance from us”.
After a certain time of “establishing this” there is a shift toward what I call the pull.
Songs are sung usually asking God to come down and manifest His presence and calls to bless His people, and thanksgiving is given for Him doing so. Then people enter into the “holy place” and everything is wonderful.
This goes on every Sunday and people consider it normal because that is where they meet God when He comes down and that is where He gets left behind until the next cycle of worship.
I know this is “a normal Sunday routine” in many places but this is not spiritual worship. It is soulish manipulation of a deformed or misunderstood Deity.
First, God is completely comfortable in flesh. He has decided to live in it eternally in the Body of Jesus Christ and resides there as we speak. He has already drawn near to us, yes, come to live in us and we in Him. There is no longer a separation between us and God.
What shall separate us from God?
Romans 8 gives us a list (Nothing).
When we create a distance between us and the Lord, we are not seeing ourselves as one spirit with him as Paul stated in 1 Cor 6:17. This type of thinking is born out of the carnal mind because it comes out of an Old Testament mindset of shadows and types.
Jesus told us that worship is not limited to a place and time, for they that worship Him “must worship” him in Spirit and in truth (John 4:23).
We are exhorted if we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit. We are also encouraged to worship in the Spirit. The spirit is the vital principle by which one functions and exists. God has already exalted Christ far above every principality and power (Phil. 2:9, Eph. 1:21).
When we sing phrases like “I exalt thee” our cognitive mind is hearing that either He is not yet exalted or needs to be by our worship. The truth is that we can only acknowledge Him as already exalted and ourselves exalted with Him.
The bottom line is that you cannot exalt Jesus Christ apart from what He has accomplished in His Death, Burial, Resurrection and Ascension; all of which you are integrally associated and joined to because you are in Him.
This is a fact regardless of our faith. Faith doesn’t make anything true, but it does allow us to share in God’s reality. The fundamental erroneous foundation that lies at the heart of soulish worship is that it is not able to discern this union and therefore manifests a separation between God and man in its expression. Paul said we cannot pull Him down or raise Him up because The WORD is present in your heart (Rom 10:8-10).
The “separation” or push is a manifestation of a false perception of our position and union in Him. Man “feels good” when He lifts God up, but this should not be at the expense of putting ourselves down and dishonoring the finished work of Christ.
Law-based Holiness emphasizes “separation from”. Grace based Holiness speaks of a “separation unto”.
Jesus prayed for our sanctification through the truth in John 17 and Hebrews tells us we have been sanctified and Paul says that Christ has become our sanctification. What God has called holy, we cannot call unholy. What He has called clean, we cannot call unclean. Are we exalting the believer above Christ? No – we are saying the believer has been exalted in and with Christ who is seated at the right hand of God.
So, the question naturally arises: what is true worship?
First, it has nothing to do with a place and time. That is a bleed through from Old Covenant thinking.
Worship is a constant awareness and gratitude of God’s presence apart from a consciousness of sin. Praise is an acknowledgment of what God has done and is doing. Thanksgiving is a gratitude for these things – but worship is being totally taken up with who God is just for who He is.
It is like just being “with someone” and enjoying their presence. It is the pure enjoyment of your Father’s presence. Worship is not something you do or work at. It is what we live in moment by moment. Don’t push and don’t pull – just rest in the enjoyment of His presence and you will find yourself “to be” a true worshipper.
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