- Blue Rose Tuesdays 05/11/2012
- What Love is This? 04/13/2012
- Rapture, Purpose, and the work of Jesus 05/12/2012
- The New Church System & Spiritual Sex-Trafficking 05/09/2012
john g lake
John G. Lake on Our Nature
“You will pardon me, but I have this consciousness when I am preaching; there comes up a wave from the congregation of a kind of stultified unbelief. Do you know where it comes from? It comes from all the years you have sat under false teachers. You have been taught that to be humble you have got to say you are a sinner, you are no good, you don’t amount to anything. You sing, ‘Weak and sickly, vile and full of sin I am.’ I do not like to preach one thing, and Charles Wesley another. If you are born again, you are a son of God. And for you to tear yourself out of your sonship, your relationship and the righteousness of God, and put yourself over in the reality of death, and tell God you are dirty and unclean, that His blood has not cleansed you, and His life has not been delivered to you, it is a monstrous thing. It is all right to sing that as an unregenerate, but it is not the experience of the sons and daughters of God.
Here is our position through Jesus Christ. God has become our righteousness. We have become His very sons and daughters, and you sing weakness, and you talk weakness and you pray weakness, and you sing unbelief, and you pray and talk it, and you go out and live it. You are like that good old woman. She said, ‘I do love that doctrine of falling from grace, and I practice it all the time.’ Another man said, ‘Brother, I believe in the dual nature. I believe that when I would do good, evil is always present with me, and I thank God that evil is always there.’
You live it and you believe it, and God cannot do anything with you. You magnify failure and you defy failure until to the majority of you, the devil is bigger than God. And you are more afraid of the devil than you are of God. You have more reverence of the devil than you have for God. If any saint would dare to say, “I am done with disease and sickness; I will never be sick again,’ ninety percent of you would say, ‘Keep your eyes on that person. He will be sick in a week. The devil sure will get him.’ You believe the devil is bigger than God. Your God is about one and a half inches high and the devil is one and a half feet high. What you need to do is to change gods and change gods quickly. There have been only a few folk that had a good-sized God.”
- John G. Lake
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“Moses Rebuked for ‘Crying Out to God’ ” – John G. Lake
Moses had his interview with the Lord at the burning bush, and God had definitely commanded him to go to Pharaoh in Egypt and demand the deliverance of the children of Israel. God gave him the signet of His presence with him; his shepherd’s rod. All the miracles that followed that demand had taken place, and the children of Israel were finally given permission by the King to leave.
They started toward the Red Sea, when the King’s heart drew back and, I presume, he felt he had done an unwise thing. He was losing the services of two and a half, and probably four million slaves. In his effort to recall what he had done, he started after them with an army. In the mean time Moses had gotten down to the Red Sea. On the right and on the left were impassable mountains, and Pharaoh and his armies were behind him.
The situation from a natural point of view was desperate, and if there was ever a time when a man was seemingly justified in calling on God in prayer, it was then.
But, I want to show you tonight, one of the things I regard as hindrance in our life for God. Most of us do just exactly as Moses did. When the test comes we stop and cry, and as a second thing we stop and pray and put ourselves in a position where we become amenable to exactly the same rebuke that came upon Moses.
Moses started to pray. It is not recorded how long he prayed, or what he said, but, instead of God being pleased, He was grieved, and said to Moses, “Why are you crying out to me? Tell the Israelites to move on.” I will turn to the Scripture and read the exact words:
“Then the LORD said to Moses, “Why are you crying out to me? Tell the Israelites to move on. Raise your staff and stretch out your hand over the sea to divide the water so that the Israelites can go through the sea on dry ground.”
- Exodus 14:15 & 16
God did not even say, you stretch out your hand, and I will divide the sea. But God said to Moses: “Stretch out your hand over the sea, and divide it.” It was not an act for God to perform, but it was an act for Moses to believe for. The responsibility was not with God, it was with Moses.
A weak Christianity is ever inclined to whine in prayer, while God waits for the believer to Command it.
In my judgment, that is the place of extreme weakness in Christian character. I feel that very frequently prayer is made a refuge, to dodge the action of faith.
And just exactly as Moses came down there and began to pray, instead of honoring God’s word to him by the use of his rod, so many times our prayer become offensive to God, because instead of praying as Moses did, God demands us to stretch forth our hand, exercise our rod of faith, and divide the waters.
In many respects it seems to me this is the most powerful lesson that the Word of God contains on the subject of prayer and faith.
Just to stop for a moment and think of God throwing the responsibility of making a passage through the sea on Moses. God would not take the responsibility, it was for Moses to believe God; and act.
God commands, “You lift up your rod, and stretch out your hand” not My hand. He was to lift the rod that God had given to him, the signet of God’s presence with him, and to be used by the hand of Moses.
In the consideration of the whole subject of an Apostolic Church, do you not see the principle in it? The principle of acceptance of responsibility from God?
I want to call your attention now to the New Testament on that line. In the ninth chapter of Luke we have Jesus commanding the twelve disciples:
“Then He called unto Him His twelve disciples, and gave them power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases, and He sent them to preach the Kingdom of God and to heal the sick.”
Moses stood before God, and God gave him the commission to go down to Egypt. Then as an evidence of His presence, He said, “What is it you have in your hands?” Moses answered, “A rod.” He said, “Throw it down”, and as Moses obeyed, it became a serpent. Then He said, “Take it up.” And it was changed to a rod again. This is one of the instances of taking up serpents. God said, “Keep it. It is the signet of my presence with you,” and it was so with Moses.
But you see Moses had forgotten, as he stood by the Red Sea, that God had given him a sign of His presence with him. Circumstances overpowered him and he commenced to pray, and that prayer was an offense to God.
Just as God had done with Moses, so Jesus called the twelve to Him, and gave them power and authority over all devils and to cure diseases, and that was their rod. He sent them to preach the Kingdom of God and heal the sick. Suppose they came to the sick, and they commenced to pray and say, “Jesus, you heal this man.”
They would be in just exactly the same position Moses was when he got down to the Red Sea and prayed, “Lord God, you divide these waters.” The two cases are absolutely parallel. God demands the action of the believer’s faith in God. YOU stretch out YOUR hand and divide the waters.
God has likewise given to every man the measure (rod) of faith, and it is for man, as the servant of God, to use the rod that God has given him. In these days there is an attitude of mind that I do not know hardly how to define. It is a mock humility. Rather it is a false humility. It is a humility that is always hiding behind the Lord, and is excusing its own lack of faith by throwing responsibility over on the Lord.
The Word of God, in speaking of this same matter concerning the disciples, says, “They departed, and went through the towns, preaching the gospel, and healing everywhere.”
Over and over again, throughout the New Testament, the Word of God says, “They healed them, the Disciples healed them,” etc. You see, they had received something from God. They were as conscious of it as Moses was conscious he had received a rod from the Lord. It was theirs to use. It was theirs to use for all purposes.
Peter used the conscious rod of God to heal the man, but he commanded him, “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise up and walk.” And the man obeyed. That was not intercession. It was a command. It was the faith in Peter’s soul that brought the result.
Peter used the rod. The rod in this case was the rod of faith. In whose hands was it? In the hands of Peter and John together, and they used that rod of faith. The word was spoken through Peter, the command was given through him. Unquestionably John’s soul was in it just as much as Peter’s was. By faith in His name, by the faith of the disciples, the power of God was made active, and the lame man was healed.
Beloved, the lesson in my soul is this. There is a place of victory, and a place of defeat, but, there is a “hair-breadth line” there. It is the place of faith in action. To believe the thing God says and to do the thing that He commands, accepting as the servant of God the responsibility God lays upon you.
Not interceding as Moses did, but as in Peter’s case, through the faith that was in his soul, he commanded the power of God on the man. Suppose Peter had prayed, “Oh, Lord you come and heal this man.” It would have been his own acknowledgment of lack of faith to do what Jesus told the disciples to do; heal the sick.
In the story of Saul, (1 Samuel 10: 6 & 7), among other things the prophet Samuel says to him:
“The Spirit of the LORD will come upon you in power, and you will prophesy with them; and you will be changed into a different person. Once these signs are fulfilled, do whatever your hand finds to do, for God is with you.”
The lesson I know God wants us to see tonight is this, that He endues a man or woman with the authority of God to accomplish the will of God. The power of God is bestowed upon the man. It is not the man that accomplishes the matter.
It is the stretching forth of the hand; the dividing of the waters must be in response to the faith of man. The man is the instrument. “Do whatever your hand finds to do, for God is with you.” That is, you simply go on about your business, and the power of God is present with you to accomplish the desire of your heart.
Returning to the case of Peter, he used the faith of God that was in his soul to restore a man who was born lame, and he was instantly restored.
In the case of Ananias and Sapphira, we see Peter using the same power, by the spoken word, not to restore a man’s limbs, but to bring judgment on a liar. When Ananias lied, the Spirit of God fell on him and he died as an example of sin, His wife likewise died.
“Behold the feet of them which have buried thy husband are at the door, and shall carry thee out.”
Man is a servant of God. Man is an instrument through which God works. The danger line is always around this, that weak men have taken to themselves the glory that belonged to God, and they have said, “We did it.” They did not do it. God did it, but the man believed God that it would be done.
How closely we are made co-workers with the Lord. “Co-laborers together with Him.” It is God’s divine purpose to accomplish His will in the world through men, God placed a profound respect upon the Body, “the church, which is His body.” I want to show you that.
In the tenth chapter of Acts, we have that remarkable response to the prayers of Cornelius when an angel came to him and said, “Cornelius, thy prayers and thine alms are come up for a memorial before God. And now send men to Joppa and call for one, Simon, whose name is Peter. He shall tell you what you should do.”
The angel came from heaven. He was a direct messenger of God. Yet the angel did not tell Cornelius the way of salvation. Why did the angel instruct Cornelius to send for Peter? Because Peter was a part of the Body of Christ, and God ordained that the power of God, with the ministry of Christ, shall be manifest through the Body. Not through angels, but through the Body, “The Church which is His Body.”
It is, therefore, the duty of the Body to use the Spirit of God to accomplish the divine will of God, the purpose of God. With what strength then, with what a consciousness of the dignity of service, Christians ought to go forth! With what a conscious realization that God has bestowed upon you the authority, and not only the authority but the endowment of the Spirit to cause you to believe God and exercise the faith for the will of God to be accomplished.
Is it any wonder that David said, “What is man that thou art mindful of him, and the son of man, that thou visitest him? For thou hast made him a little lower that the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honor. Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hand, thou hast put all things under his feet.” Man God working together, co-laborers, co-workers. Blessed be God!
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- Healing In Eternity 05/16/2012
- Are You In Need Of Rest? 05/14/2012
- How Deep is Your Relationship with God? 04/12/2012
- Organic Church Introduction 01/30/2012
- The 7 Most Popular Verses in the Bible 05/16/2012
- The Way 05/04/2012

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