Tuesday, June 19, 2012

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: PRACTICAL DISCIPLESHIP


Another Coffee Break:

Practical Discipleship



Once again I'm out of sync with my normal publishing schedule for these Coffee Breaks.   Della's mother, Opal Hendershot, went home to be with the Lord just over a month ago.  At 83 years of age she's had a rich and full life, the overwhelming majority of which was spent walking with the Lord.  Ever since Della's step-dad went home in 2001, we've mostly cared for her mom.  She outlived both her first husband (Della's natural father) and her second husband.  The last few years have seen declining health with congestive heart disease and she has repeatedly said -- and especially during the past few months -- that she wanted to go home.



Even though we've prepared for this day and thought we were quite ready for Mom's homegoing, it still caught Della off-guard and turned out to be quite a struggle for her emotionally.  The homegoing service Friday, May 11th was nothing short of spectacular, being filled with praise, worship and testimonies of lives changed or influenced for the sake of the Kingdom of God.  Much of the family was able to gather together for the event with Della's brothers and her sister traveling, along with our daughter, Danielle, and her husband, Anthony, and our youngest son, Joshua, and his wife, Michelle, all of them from Alaska to be here.



Bob Widmann, who pastors Cornerstone Assembly, did a spectacular job of ministering at the funeral, and five people responded to the message of salvation at the conclusion.



The loss of Della's mother meant that we've had estate matters to take care of, and those things have kept us incredibly busy and pushed to long hours with family members helping to dispose of legal matters and distribution of possessions throughout.  Hopefully, the long-overdue release of this Coffee Break will get things back on track.



We really could continue our discussion on the Call of the Bridegroom, and perhaps this Coffee Break will serve as an addendum to that study.  One of the things that seems abundantly clear is that there has been an excessive focus within the structured church world on getting people born again and missing entirely the disciplined walk with the Lord Jesus Christ that must commence immediately upon making the initial commitment.



The Great Commission (as we are so inclined to call it) is not a commission from the Lord to get people "saved."  Contrary to some of the popular translations, Jesus did not simply say, "Go ye therefore and teach all nations....."  His command was that we go forth and "disciple" all nations."



The NASB translates the Greek text accurately, putting it like this: "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.  Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."  (Matthew 28:18-20)



There's a huge difference between simply preaching and teaching, and "discipling."  The truth of this understanding really began to spread throughout the body of Christ during the Charismatic Renewal during the early 1970's.  I remember when -- at a World Map Conference -- Bob Mumford was the scheduled speaker and he stepped aside for Juan Carlos Ortiz to share the remarkable successes of the "discipleship" ministry Juan Carlos was seeing in Argentina.



As has been and continues to be true, whenever real truth begins to be propagated within the body of Christ and Christians begin to grow and mature and become a genuine threat to Satan's lies and deception, he seeks to contaminate the message with extremes and thereby render the truth either unpalatable to most Christians or laced with so much error that it becomes totally rejected.  I watched this take place following Juan Carlos' sharing.



What worked spectacularly for the Argentinean Revival (as it has been sometimes referred) with the teaching and practical applications of the disciplined walk in Christ Jesus mostly failed in North America.  It wasn't that what Juan Carlos Ortiz shared was wrong, or that his methods and applications were wrong.  The problem was that the message and applications of discipleship as integrated into Argentinean culture and life simply did not translate well into American (or more accurately, "westernized") lifestyles and culture.



Many of my pastor friends attempted to apply Juan Carlos' methodologies within their American churches with explosive and disastrous results.  It became known within this country as "the Discipleship Controversy," and because of the failures and damaged lives that resulted from the misapplication of the truth, large segments of the body of Christ rejected the whole idea of being discipled.



Just because South American methodologies mostly failed in North America doesn't mean that the message of discipleship and discipling was or is wrong!  Far from it!  Each part of the world -- OK, let's make it more personal -- each and every segment of society has a uniqueness to it that requires a practical understanding and application which makes it work.



Let's talk for a minute about some of the practical aspects and principles of true discipleship.



The whole idea of a "disciple" is found in the core word: discipline.  A disciple is one who lives his or her life in a disciplined manner obeying the tenets and principles set forth by the mentor or the teacher or leader under whom they've submitted.



Living a disciplined life is a whole lot more than simply refraining from certain activities you might otherwise enjoy, or engaging in a certain careful and controlled lifestyle.  The "disciple" learns to adopt the mindset, the thought processes, the character and the nature of his/her mentor or instructor.



What was it that happened to Peter when he stood outside warming himself by the fire while Jesus was being interrogated by those who shortly thereafter crucified Him?  (See Matthew 26:69-73)  First a young girl says to Peter, "You were with Jesus of Galilee."  Shortly thereafter another young woman says to those standing by, "This man was also with Jesus of Nazareth."



A short period of time ensues during which conversation takes place between all those gathered together -- conversation which includes Peter.  Pretty soon some of those participating in the conversation stop and say to him, "You certainly are one of them.  Your manner of speaking clearly identifies you.”



You get the idea, I'm sure.  Years ago when I was ministering with Dwain McKenzie at Long Beach Christian Center, Dwain and I periodically participated in conferences at Church on the Way in Van Nuys, California.  Anyone who's been around Jack Hayford for any length of time knows that he has a very distinctive speaking style and expressions you can identify anywhere.



We often chuckled when we heard some of the elders or young men he was mentoring in ministry.  If you didn't see them and simply heard them speak, you could be forgiven for thinking that you were listening to Jack.  They had his speaking style down to a "T" along with many of his phrases or expressions.



That's how it was with Peter.  He'd been discipled by the Lord Jesus Christ.  His mannerisms were affected.  He carried on a conversation like Jesus did.  He spoke like Jesus.  He had yet to be filled with Holy Spirit, however, and as a consequence lacked the boldness that comes with that infilling.



Because Jesus was being accused before Caiaphas of blasphemy, Peter's fears kicked in and he was afraid of being known in this court setting as an associate or friend of Jesus, or being one of His disciples.  In order, therefore, to convince the bystanders with whom he'd been carrying on a conversation that he was not part of Jesus' disciples, he did something that was so uncharacteristic of Jesus as to express himself first with an oath, swearing [on his mother's grave?] that he didn't even know Jesus.  Then after being identified for the third time as one who was normally seen with Jesus, he tried to convince his accusers with the use of cursing and vulgar language.



But Jesus' mannerisms, His speech and His countenance were known for peace, for authority and (mostly) for exceptional gentleness.  Peter may have temporarily put off those who questioned his association, but Jesus' mentoring, His teaching, His instruction and His discipling of Peter had made real change.  When Peter heard the cock crow, it shook him to the core of his being.  He realized that he had done just what Jesus had said he would do: he denied Jesus three times.  And Peter couldn't stick around.  He went out and wept bitter, remorseful tears over his betrayal of Jesus.



You see, Jesus had become Peter's best friend.  Yes, Jesus was Peter's Lord and Savior.  Yes, Jesus was the One who had sent him out to heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons, and preach the Gospel of the Kingdom.  And Peter had seen direct, measurable, tangible results and consequences of functioning in the very onoma, the character and nature of the Lord Jesus Christ.  That ministry had affected his household.  His wife's mother had been raised from her sick bed, made completely whole.



Remember when Jesus sent the 70 out, two by two, and told them to "heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out demons"?  Then Jesus said to them, "freely ye have received, freely give."  (Matthew 10:8)



The Greek text uses a fascinating word which our KJV translators rendered as "received."  The Greek lambano is one of those picture words which conveys a whole lot more than our simplified "received."  This word communicates the transfer or impartation of some idea, some truth, some concept by the one (in this case, Jesus) discipling.  That transfer or impartation is then seized upon, laid claim to and possessed by the one receiving the impartation.



Does that make it clearer for you?



Then let's take this the next step.  One cannot disciple or bring under certain discipline if one is not himself under discipline.  Consider the centurion who came to Jesus in desperation on behalf of his servant.  Pay attention to the very particular wording in this example in the Word.



Luke 7:2-10: "And a certain centurion’s servant, who was dear unto him, was sick, and ready to die.  And when he heard of Jesus, he sent unto him the elders of the Jews, beseeching him that he would come and heal his servant.  And when they came to Jesus, they besought him instantly, saying, That he was worthy for whom he should do this:  For he loveth our nation, and he hath built us a synagogue.  Then Jesus went with them. And when he was now not far from the house, the centurion sent friends to him, saying unto him, Lord, trouble not thyself: for I am not worthy that thou shouldest enter under my roof:  Wherefore neither thought I myself worthy to come unto thee: but say in a word, and my servant shall be healed.  For I also am a man set under authority, having under me soldiers, and I say unto one, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it.  When Jesus heard these things, he marvelled at him, and turned him about, and said unto the people that followed him, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel.  And they that were sent, returning to the house, found the servant whole that had been sick."



First of all, the centurion comes to Jesus recognizing that He (Jesus) is under Father's authority.  He understands what being "under authority" actually means, namely, that he willingly has subjected himself to the authority of his superiors.  He lives a life of absolute discipline.  As a result, he himself has been commissioned and placed in authority over 100 soldiers who are "under authority" to him as their superior.



The centurion recognizes that Jesus operates under the authority of Father with Father's commissioning, and that with that place of submission comes the full backing and commitment of Heaven to support whatever command He gives.  He has both seen and heard of the miracles that Jesus does and knows that He could never do those things without first having been commissioned and authorized by direct command.



This is perhaps the most basic and fundamental aspect of "discipling."  The one who disciples others must first be under the authority of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  The discipler must have personally seen, heard and -- through personal experience -- lived and walked the discipline of Father through Jesus Christ, operating through the power and enabling of Holy Spirit.



In the past 65+ years of walking with the Lord, it has been my pleasure to lead many to salvation through the Lord Jesus Christ.  I've lost track of the number of people laid hands on to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit with the attendant signs, and couldn't begin to tell you how many people I've baptized in water.  That's all well and good, but the command of Jesus is a whole lot more than that.  The issue isn't how many folks I've led to the New Birth: the issue is how many I've successfully discipled in such a way that they duplicate the same presence, authority and power of Holy Spirit manifested in and through me.  That number, I'm sorry to say, is a whole lot smaller than the number of those with whom I've prayed for salvation.



Evangelism is a whole lot more than preaching and leading souls to the Lord.  Evangelism -- at least Jesus' definition of evangelism -- incorporates living a disciplined life under the command of Holy Spirit.  True evangelism involves becoming involved with those whom you lead to Jesus and discipling them so that the same Word of Life, the same Word of Faith, the same Word of Love exhibited in your life is duplicated and manifested in them.



Make sense?  Good!  Let me share a personal experience -- one from 65 years ago for the sake of illustration.



As a five-year-old, I lived, breathed, walked and talked Jesus.  My father was my discipler at the time, and I wanted in the worst way to duplicate the pattern I saw in him.  I preached, testified, cajoled and did everything I could to persuade my friends and playmates that they needed to commit themselves to Jesus Christ.



It was the winter of 1947.  We lived at the time in Nome, Alaska.  It was a particularly brutal winter with temperatures at or near 40 below zero for a period of several weeks.  The winter had begun with a huge snowfall and subsequent winds had piled the snow in drifts so high you could literally climb up on the roof of our church building.



Of course the blowing wind, coupled with the cold temperatures, made the snow rock hard; and that made it perfect for a bunch of kids who wanted to make snow caves, igloos, or whatever.  My brother and I, however, had a different plan.  We borrowed one of Dad's hand saws and cut out a room roughly 8 X 8 X 5 in a huge snow bank that swept over our house and church.  Naturally, we cut out a neat door and window.  We followed that with cutting blocks of hardened snow which made a perfect bench, an altar, a podium to preach from; and, presto! Mom gave us some candles to use for light, and we had ourselves a little church!  Now, don't laugh.  It was serious business to us.



The first order of business was to gather our friends and playmates to "have church."  Howie (my brother) led the singing.  I preached a 15 or 20-minute salvation message and had "an altar call" just like Dad's.  It wasn't a game, and I wasn't pretending.  This took place during a three-year period between the ages of four and seven when I had constant visitations from angels.  Mom had taught me to read by reading the Bible, and by this time I knew it fairly well -- at least I knew the pertinent parts of it as far as salvation and baptism were concerned.



You see, I was learning from Dad's example and the pattern he'd set for me.  He was my discipler.  Three of my playmates that day responded to the salvation message and knelt at that snow altar to receive Jesus Christ.  Their response was real and from that day forward I continued to teach them from the Word.  I could only teach, of course, those things that were real to me, but my objective was to transmit them into the lives of my three friends.



Well, at forty below zero, you don't baptize anyone in water, so you wait until spring when water (especially after an abundant winter like that one) abounds.  Seems like it was in May or early June when the temperatures were between 40 and 50 degrees (above zero, of course) and deep mud puddles flourished everywhere.  (When Dad built the church in Nome he didn't include a baptismal tank, so we just did the logical thing.)  By now I had passed my sixth birthday.  My friends were ready to be baptized, and we found a suitable mud puddle where they could be immersed.  We didn't think about changes of clothes or anything like that.  I walked into the water and, one by one, they came in after me to be baptized.  I never knew whether they got in trouble with their folks for coming home soaking wet in their clothes, but we all knew that we had taken the proper steps as far as the Lord was concerned!  (OK, no fair laughing!  Like I said, it was real and we were serious!)



In the years that followed, all three of those first converts went on to become strong Christian believers, and one of them went on into pastoral ministry.  It was my first experience at discipling, and I followed the pattern that my discipler, Dad, had set for me.



Let me wrap up this Coffee Break with a simple and practical definition of discipleship.



To disciple (according to Jesus' command) means to essentially duplicate the Jesus in you in someone else.  There's more to this picture, but I think I'll leave it there for today.



See you again in a few days.

"Ministry by definition is the spiritual work or service of any Christian or a group of Christians. One of the greatest revelations we can ever embrace is that whatever we do in life, is ministry, because the light of God in us and through us never goes dim. Every job, every assignment, our family, our leisure and whatever pathway that the Holy Spirit may lead us, is ministry."   (Robert Ricciardelli)

Blessings on you!

Regner

Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES

709 South 7th Street
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 515-0133


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Sunday, May 6, 2012

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: THE CALL OF THE BRIDEGROOM, Part 5


Another Coffee Break:

THE CALL OF THE BRIDEGROOM

Part 5


This is a bit tardy, but allow me to express my thanks to the more than one thousand people who sent me individual birthday greetings for my 70th birthday!  Have to say that I was more than a little astonished to receive so many cards, letters and e-notes.  It more than doubled the largest number of birthday wishes I've received in any prior years.  All I can say is, WOW!!!  Anyway, once again, Thank You!

This past weekend was one of the most rewarding experiences in intimate worship that I've seen in more than a decade.  Asked to lead worship for a Full Gospel Businessmen's retreat, Rich Warren (close friend, brother, fellow-musician and bassist) joined me in leading somewhere between 120 and 150 men into the presence of the Lord.  It would not be overstating things to say that there were more than a few moments when we experienced the Glory of the Lord tangibly.


When you hear more than a hundred men singing at the top of their voice, "Blessing and Honor and Glory and Power be unto the Lamb forever and ever" ..... well, words fail me!!  Like I shared with a few folks with whom we fellowship regularly, your goose bumps get goose pimples!  (Grin)


There were more than a few occasions when a holy hush settled over everyone and we just basked in the immediate presence of the Lord.  One brother told me that he visibly saw angels with us as we worshiped.

 As we have done for more than 20 years, the overwhelming majority of the worship and praise music was spontaneous.  We had no list of songs to work from, no sheet music in front of any of the musicians, and -- except for Rich and me -- none of them had ever worked with us before; and none of them had ever been involved in a completely spontaneous setting like this before.


Last fall, Rich and I were invited to share this kind of worship at a Seattle high school.  Afterwards the band director requested us to stay on and speak with the band class and simply share with them what we were doing, how we got there, and how these young budding musicians could begin moving in this realm themselves.  We spent better than an hour sharing with the class.  Three of those students came to the retreat and brought their instruments to join in with us.  You'd have thought they'd been playing with us for years!  Those young men had been working together in the months since we'd shared with them and were ready to flow in the Spirit with us.


Craig Manley brought his (and his church's) drums and percussion, and he joined us for the first time -- again, flowing with us in the Spirit and (as he experienced) doing things in rhythm and percussion he'd never done before.


Finally, another young man from Spain joined us on the keyboard.  A trained classical pianist with a stellar reputation as a musician, this was a totally new experience for Jorge.  It was a bit reminiscent of our days back in the early 90's when Marcia Treend brought her cello into the mix.  Marcia had been principal cellist with the Detroit and Spokane Symphonies with a long career as a classical musician.  It was a struggle for her to adapt to a totally spontaneous mode without any sheet music in front of her, playing only what she heard in her spirit.  That same thing applied to Jorge, and it was marvelous to watch him adapt in less than three days and flow with us!

It really is a work of the Holy Spirit to bring such a group of musicians together and orchestrate a flow of worship with all of them in such a way that you would think they'd worked together for years!  But it is in exactly that kind of unstructured atmosphere with folks who have one mind and one spirit to minister to the Lord that the Holy Spirit can create the most extravagant flow, exhibiting the Glory of the Lord in such a profound manner!

 Once again, all I can say is, WOW !!!  What a way to live!

 Instead of just ending this Coffee Break in my usual manner with a note from one of the prophetic individuals I've come to know and appreciate, it seemed appropriate to begin this one with a word from Arthur (Art) Katz, a Messianic Jewish brother whose ministry I was introduced to some 40 years ago.

“‘The time is surely coming,’” says the Lord God, ‘that I will send a famine on the land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord’” (Amos 8:11-12).

"The thought strikes me that the famine is not so much for the lack of speaking as the lack of hearing. I have had the increasing impression that God’s people do not know how to hear the word of God. Or, unlike the Thessalonian converts from paganism, they do not believe that the word they are hearing is indeed God’s word.

Therefore, the word is received casually if not indifferently as the word of man, that is to say, without effect. Perhaps we have been filling up on verbal “junk food” and have dulled our appetites for “real food” by the profusion of much speaking of our own that leaves us sated if not bloated, and therefore we suffer malnutrition in the midst of seeming plenty. Certainly we lack the evidence of growth and change that the word of God should accomplish, and we seem fixed in our immaturity and shallowness.

Perhaps we need to consider that the act of hearing is as much an act of grace as that of speaking itself.  Surely God's Word requires an attentiveness and retention for which the world has not schooled us.  The sobering caution, "When you hear My voice, harden not your hearts" implies that God's Word will not allow our indifference.  If there is not a hearing, then there will certainly be a hardening!"

This is an excellent admonition for God's people today.  Art's comment that "we have been filling up on verbal "junk food" and have dulled our appetites for "real food" hits the nail on the head.  That "verbal junk food" is partly a product -- as Art notes -- of much speaking, as well as the "mixture of truth with poison" to which I referred as we wrapped up the last Coffee Break.

Oftentimes, attempts by ministers to apply the formulas learned in Bible College or seminary to deal with critical situations in the lives of people they're supposed to be responsible for results in tragedy or even greater chaos.  When the formulas fail, and the lives of those people who depend on him crash, condemnation sets in.  Because the "minister" has put his dependence on formulas and doctrines which are now ingrained into the very core of his existence -- in the name of putting that dependence in the Lord -- the "minister" now feels that the Lord has failed him.  Despair sets in, depression reigns, and questions arise by the multitude.  What's the problem?

The "minister" never heard from the Lord.  Much of his upbringing and preparation for "ministry" was predicated on "profane, empty babblings which only serve to advance ungodliness."  Much of his upbringing and training was based in "performance."

This results in judgment and criticism of the people who fail in their efforts to apply the formulas he is teaching.  Condemnation and despair set in for those who cannot make their "faith" work according to the formulaic methodology they are taught and, all too often, they decide to give up trying because "they are not spiritual enough."  

This is not relationship with the Lord!   This is legalism and performance!   Those who have suffered these guilt pangs need to dump them as coming from Satan, and not from the Lord!  (I share these things from the perspective of having spent most of my life "in the ministry" [to use the common cliché] and having seen many of my brethren suffer in this manner.)

Referring back once again to the last Coffee Break (and the retranslation of II Timothy 2:15 from the Greek text) there is another side to this concept of "study" which affects all of us -- and particularly, those of us who have over the years received visions or experienced something where the Lord has revealed a truth with a specific application to us.

Like so many of my brethren, I experienced much in the way of revelation from the Lord in my early youth.   Although I was extremely blessed by the character and dimension of the experiences which the Lord gave to me, I grew up in classical Pentecostal circles with all of the attendant church structure.  The things which the Lord spoke within my spirit in those early days were of such a nature that I could not find a way to make them fit within my understanding.  When I attempted to share them with men and women in leadership within the denomination, the most common response was, "Well, that's wonderful, son!  Some day the Lord will use you as a pastor, or a missionary, or even an evangelist, and you'll win lots of souls for Christ."

In my spirit, I knew this was a wrong interpretation and application of what the Lord was saying, but there was absolutely nothing within the church structure which would permit me to function as the Lord had revealed Himself to me.  By the same token, I had no example of that which had penetrated my being by the Holy Spirit among any leaders whom I knew (or knew of), nor among my peers.  In my thirst for revelation knowledge, I read -- voraciously!  I couldn't stand books on doctrine, and I detested the great majority of the so-called religious books which were available, so I read the Bible -- from cover to cover -- again, and again, and again.  By the time I got ready to attend Bible college, I had been through the Bible, from cover to cover, at least 25 times, had memorized hundreds of verses, some entire books of the Bible, and many chapters verbatim from the KJV.

The primary thing Bible college did for me was to program me to fit those things which the Lord had revealed to me in my early youth into the framework of the church system or structure.  I became "a pastor."  For much of the first 25 years of pastoral ministry, I struggled to fit the mold.  At least three times, different pastors -- brethren with whom I was closely associated, labored with and deeply respected -- came to me and said, "Regner, I'm not sure what you are, but you certainly are not a pastor!"

The more they said it, the more frustrated I became, and the greater the internal drive to fit the stereotypical model.  It was not until the summer of 1974 that I received a direct word from the Lord which clarified the situation, and delivered me from the necessity of fitting the structural and religious mold.  I have from time to time continued on in a kind of pastoral ministry but I've now just pastored as a part of what God called me to.  I've been able to minister freely without the structural requirement or the pressure of fulfilling someone else's expectations of what "a pastor" is supposed to be.

Enter the next phase of deliverance.  (This was only the first of several stages of deliverance from "religion.")   In 1975, the Lord began the revelation to me of the vision which most of you have heard related as "The House of Praise."  Without relating all of the detail, suffice it to say that this vision began with a perspective of David, the tabernacle he set up, and the praisers and worshipers he appointed, and employed on a 24-hour-per-day basis to minister to the Lord.  Being still stuck in the "structure" of the church, I related everything the Lord was showing me to church structure, and tried to make it fit within that structure.   As a  result, I saw "The House of Praise" as a modern-day version of the ministry David instituted, with singers and musicians on a payroll, ministering to the Lord in a building, or structure, which would be called "The House of Praise." 

For fifteen years I was stuck with this "vision." It was not that the vision was flawed, or that the revelation came out of eating chocolate-covered jalapeno peppers before going to bed one night.  The problem was that I interpreted what the Lord showed me within the framework of my religious understanding, even going so far as to place advertisements in the Anchorage Daily News for musicians and singers who were "oriented towards praise" music, and then interviewing the respondents in an effort to "put this thing together."  From where the Lord has brought us today, this comes across as sincere stupidity.  (I was genuinely sincere -- and stupid!)   We laugh every time we talk about it.

Some months after Earle, Marcia, Della and I began to gather together daily for worship, the real truth of the revelation hit me like a ton of bricks.  Where our worship began with a few minutes each day, as the daily gathering continued throughout the months, we found that we were ministering to the Lord -- in the corporate sense -- for anywhere from an hour to three or four hours.

When we would break up and head to our respective homes at the end of the day, the worship continued in our beings on nonstop basis.  It became so strong that we would awaken in the middle of the night singing in the spirit.  When we arose in the morning, worship was going through our spirits.  During the workday, in the midst of performing normal work duties which would seemingly have nothing whatever to do with spiritual things, worship would be flowing uninterrupted through our spirits to the Lord. 

What David accomplished, and had to pay singers and musicians to accomplish after the flesh, the Lord accomplished in us after the Spirit.  We didn't have 128 singers and musicians like David did -- it just started with the four of us -- and we couldn't be gathered together 24 hours per day like those singers and musicians did in shifts, but worship was going forth, nonetheless -- in our spirits -- 24 hours per day.  We were the House of Praise!  We had become a House of Worship.

This is the very thing which the Lord is addressing in us, NOW.  Most of us have received visions of things to come; and most of us have, in some way, become involved in activities related to these visions in an honest effort to carry out what we believe the Lord has spoken to us.

Has the Lord spoken to us?  YES!   Has He given us a vision of His purposes for these end-times?  YES!  Have we tried to fulfill that which the Lord has given us according to our understanding?  With all of our hearts!  Is that understanding flawed by religious doctrines and years of indoctrination within the church structure?   Without question!   Have we missed the mark?   Sure we have!

Does that mean that we've completely set aside the idea of a physical location for a 24-hour ministry of praise and worship similar to the Tabernacle of David?  NO!

You see, sometimes it is necessary for Holy Spirit to rid us of preconceived notions and religious programming before He can move us forward with the vision He has imparted.  We must first be free of religion and religious concepts if we are to respond and act according to the Lord's plans and purpose.  We must first become that to which we are being called.  We must first become the visual of that which Holy Spirit has shown us before we can go any further!

Let's get one thing straight!  The call of the Bridegroom is to intimacy with Him!  The call of the Bridegroom is to and for a people who will fulfill Him, His heart's desires and His destiny for each of us within His Kingdom.  This is a call for an overcoming people -- not a people who are content with who they are in Christ Jesus, and not a people who are content with "business as usual."

Those "business as usual" Christians (and I use that word rather loosely) may actually make it to Heaven by the stupendous grace and mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ, just by virtue of their acceptance and acknowledgement of His shed blood on the Cross, but they will NEVER be invited into the Bridal Chamber.

Finally -- and most of all -- the call of the Bridegroom is to and for a people who will literally and demonstrably BECOME HIS BRIDE, His Counterpart, His Other Self!

Are we clear?  Good!  Next week we'll move this discussion along as we talk about Practical Discipleship.

"God is waiting for those to arise who will lay down their own lives and agendas to become the intercessors He must have. He's waiting for preachers to arise who are willing to stand against any amount of scorn, ridicule, or persecution to declare God's truth, righteousness, and justice without compromise. He is willing. Are we?  The Lord lit the fire on the altars of His tabernacle in the wilderness and the temple in Jerusalem. He then commanded the priests to keep these fires going. Likewise, only God can start an authentic revival, but only man can end it by not keeping the fire going. For this to be done, there must be an underlying hunger for God and willingness on the part of His people to sacrifice their own purposes to give themselves for His purposes."   (Prophetic Word from Rick Joyner)

Blessings on you!

Regner

Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
709 South 7th Street
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 515-0133


All Coffee Break articles are copyright by Regner A. Capener, but authorization for reprinting, reposting, copying or re-use, in whole or in part, is granted – provided proper attribution and this notice are included intact.  Older Coffee Break archives are now available at http://regnersrangers.multiply.com/journal/ and are being slowly added at http://www.AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.  Coffee Break articles are normally published weekly.

If you would like to have these articles arrive each morning in your email, please send a blank email to: Subscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.comTo unsubscribe, send a blank email to Unsubscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.

CAPENER MINISTRIES is a tax-exempt church ministry. Should you desire to participate and covenant with us as partners in this ministry, please contact us at either of the above email or physical addresses, or visit http://www.RiverWorshipCenter.org.

Monday, April 23, 2012

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: THE CALL OF THE BRIDEGROOM, Part 4


Another Coffee Break:


THE CALL OF THE BRIDEGROOM

Part 4

If ever there has been a day for the manifestation of the Bride of Christ -- the Sons of God, THIS IS IT!

In the last Coffee Break I told you about Della's return from Alaska.  However, I did not tell you about an extraordinary event that took place with her and our longtime friend, Dorie Wassilie.

It was roughly ten days ago when Della and Dorie decided to take a drive from Anchorage to Seward -- a distance (one-way) of roughly 110 miles -- for no other purpose than to simply enjoy God's spectacular handiwork.  If you've never been to Alaska, it easily has some of the most gorgeous scenery you've ever seen in your life, and the drive to Seward takes you past some major glaciers.

On the return trip (and it was getting late in the afternoon) the sun was getting lower and lower in the sky, and at one point was somewhat obscured from their vision because of the mountains.  As they came around a particular bend in the highway, they had a very clear view of the sun in front of them.  What I should say is that they had a very clear view of TWO SUNS in the sky.  No, I don't mean a shadow or a sun dog; we're talking about two very distinct suns of at least equal brightness spread about 10 degrees apart in the sky!

If you've ever seen Star Trek or Stargate episodes where the main characters in the series have visited planets with two suns, or even the concluding scenes in the movie 2010: A Space Odyssey (the follow-up to 2001), then you know exactly what I'm talking about.  That's how clear it was in front of them.  What made it all the more interesting was the fact that there was a ring around the second sun (a sun dog) -- not the main sun!  They pulled off the road and got out to watch it.  They had to watch for five or more minutes before the second sun began to diminish in brightness and they realized that the sun dog surrounded it instead of the main sun.

Della called me immediately to tell me what was happening, and I asked her if she had a camera with her to photograph the event.  She had forgotten our camera, but Dorie had hers and snapped some pictures (unfortunately, AFTER the second sun was diminishing in size and brightness).

Consider something that Jesus said: "And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring; Men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth: for the powers of heaven shall be shaken."  (Luke 21:25-26)

Then there's Joel's prophecy (the same one that Peter quoted on the Day of Pentecost):  "And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions: And also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my spirit. And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and the terrible day of the LORD come. And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the LORD shall be delivered: for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall be deliverance, as the LORD hath said, and in the remnant whom the LORD shall call."  (Joel 2:28-32)

Now, put that double-sun event in the light of these prophecies, and we have a wake-up call from the Lord!  And let's not forget that at the time of Creation, (Genesis 1:14) God said that He was placing the sun, the moon and the stars in the skies as His "signs."  When we see a doubling of the sun, and a display that puts two distinct suns of equal brightness ten degrees apart (and by the way, to the best of my knowledge, this is an exceedingly rare event!), Holy Spirit is communicating something of great prophetic significance to us.

What is the significance?

Beyond the fact that we all know this portends and prophesies the return of Jesus Christ, let's get to the last statement in this prophecy since it spells out exactly what we've been talking about with the calling of the Bridegroom to the Bride.

First, let me share one other pertinent scripture which uses a unique description of Jesus in a way that no other prophecy uses: (Malachi 4:2-3) "But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall.  And ye shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet in the day that I shall do this, saith the LORD of hosts."

Notice that Malachi refers to the Lord as the "Sun of Righteousness" -- NOT the Son of Righteousness.  Why does he phrase it like that?  Because Malachi has seen a prophetic picture of the Sons of God arising in this hour after the same pattern that Joel described.  Some of you may think that I'm really taking this out of context so let me remind you first of all how Malachi ends his prophecy, and then take you back to the specific wording that Joel uses.

Here we go: "And ye shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet in the day that I shall do this, saith the Lord of hosts."

The rising of the "Sun of Righteousness" is manifested IN the people of God -- and more specifically, IN THE BRIDE, that same people Paul describes in Romans 8:19 as the SONS OF GOD!  Still think I've left the planet or that I'm out in La-La Land?  Then consider Joel's last statement in his prophecy.

"For in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall be deliverance, as the LORD hath said, and in the remnant whom the LORD shall call."

Who?  Where?

In Mount Zion.  In Jerusalem.  In the remnant whom the Lord shall call.  If that doesn't make sense to you, or you are still seeing these words and phrases as a description of the literal city of Jerusalem (and in fact they are!) the prophets began to use these descriptions -- Mount Zion, and Jerusalem -- to prophetically describe, first of all, the larger body of God's people (Jerusalem), and then that distinct and called-out people -- the Bride -- (Mount Zion) who represented those who understood and sought after the heart and the heart's desire of our Bridegroom.

Of course, Jerusalem and Mount Zion were representative of God's people, Israel, and because His covenant was a covenant that lasts "through all generations" (the Hebrew phraseology makes it much clearer: the eternity of eternities), it certainly applied to the Jews, and more specifically, to those Jews who recognized, acknowledged and worshiped Jesus Christ!  But these prophets of old had a much larger vision which included the Vine (Jesus) and the branches (non-Jewish Christians) grafted into the Vine -- or, as Paul describes in Romans 11, we as Christians being grafted into the olive tree (the symbol of Israel) as God's chosen and called-out people.

So what are we saying here?  In Jerusalem and in Mount Zion SHALL BE DELIVERANCE!  Hello?  Are you seeing it?  Deliverance, Salvation, Healing -- it is all available to the world today in the Sons (Suns) of God as they are arising in the midst of this darkening world.

One more prophetic word and I'll get on (I hope) with where I originally planned to go in this Coffee Break.

What was it that Isaiah prophesied?  "Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the LORD is risen upon thee.  For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the LORD shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising."

Now, WHO is arising?  The people of God!  That chosen, called-out and set-apart people we corporately refer to as "The Bride of Christ" -- or as the Song of Solomon phrases it, "My Sister, My Spouse" (KJV), and more accurately translated from this Hebrew metaphor, "My Counterpart, My Other Self!"  And, folks, this is a people arising and shining during a darkening age, an age in which "gross darkness shall cover the earth."

THAT, Family of God, is precisely what the call of the Bridegroom is designed to do: to call to attention, to commission, and to send forth in the earth a people upon whom the Glory of the Lord has arisen.  Now do you see the significance of the double-sun event?  Do you see, do you hear the call of the Bridegroom?  Do you see His signs in the heavens?  Then, my friends, you are beginning to grasp what Holy Spirit is doing and saying in the earth today.

Whewww!!!  That explanation took a whole lot longer than I expected -- and honestly, Holy Spirit just began to download things into my spirit as I wrote.  You're getting it fresh as I'm receiving it!

That said, perhaps you are seeing the immediacy that comes with a rhema Word.  Let me pick up with where I left off in our last discussion as we talk about the revealed (in us) Word vs. academic study of the written Word.

I have shared in these Coffee Breaks in time past the travesty of the KJV translation of II Timothy 2:15 in which the word "Study" has been translated from the Greek "spoudason" in contradistinction to the real message of Holy Spirit.  That message  is to "Be instantly responsive!"  What a huge difference in meaning!  What a huge difference that one single word represents to those of us who are pressing in for the intimate presence of the Lord.

A verse of Scripture which we have all heard hundreds, if not thousands of times, is found in II Timothy 2:15.  The KJV renders it, "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth."  This is an absolutely tragic translation.  Although the NASB and NIV both render it more accurately, "Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, handling accurately the word of truth," the KJV rendition, "Study," has been a mainstay of many messages and doctrinal presentations.

Reading this passage in the original Greek text one day, I discovered that it has some very immediate and potent applications in the call of the Bridegroom to the Bride.

The verse begins with the Greek word, "spoudason."  While the NASB rendering, "Be diligent," is an acceptable translation, this word has some deeper meanings.  It is eminently more accurate to translate it, "Be instantly responsive..."  Where the Greek word, "dokimon," is rendered "approved" in most of the translations, this word has a unique background, and a special application for this particular passage.

"Dokimon" was a word originated among numismatists to identify the process by which gold and silver coins were tested after smelting in a crucible.  It was the process which allowed them to determine the genuineness and purity of coins, as well as to detect any counterfeit coins, bars, etc.  The translation which renders this word "approved" is sort of OK, but you really need the context in order to appreciate it.

In the same vein, the word, "parasteesai," translated: "to present," was first used by the Septuagint translators within the context of "making oneself available for the purpose of being questioned," as well as "making oneself available" metaphorically "for fellowship and intimacy."

It therefore becomes a powerful message from the Holy Spirit when we translate it thus: "Be instantly responsive to the Lord, making yourself available to Him in the midst of the crucible, a tried and tested laborer, who has no fear of being examined -- one who, by virtue of God's testing and the time spent in the crucible with Him, knows the proven word of truth."

The "proven word of truth" in this instance can be identified as a "rhema" word from the Lord which has been walked out and put to the test in our lives.  It is an experiential word!  It is an incontestable word no man can combat with any doctrinal argument or theory.

Verses 16 and 17 of the same chapter reinforce this.  Without taking the time, here, to break down each of the pertinent Greek words or phrases, it can be rendered, "Stand aloof from, and avoid the untested, untried "word" which comes forth from those who would propagate speculation and create their own doctrines. These profane speculations and so-called "words" are empty babblings which only serve to advance ungodliness; and those who spread these doctrines will only yield a gangrene pasture -- a source of poison to those who ingest their "word"......"

The unbalanced emphasis on "Study" which has been ingrained into the fabric of church structure has led to a large majority of the doctrines which skillfully bring division among God's people. The push to "study" has led to the creation of seminaries and Bible colleges, with the subsequent "ordination" of those who complete the "approved" courses of study.  Those who graduate are supposedly ready for "ministry," ready to step out and speak in the name of the Lord,  ready to administer guidance and correction to those who are growing in the Lord.

Please don't throw rocks at me for saying this!  I'm not quibbling with the need to study or (better, yet) immerse oneself in the Word.  David wrote and sang, "Thy Word have I hid in mine heart that I might not sin against thee." (Psalm 119:11)  In this case where we see "word" it is the Hebrew parallel to "rhema."  Thus, the "Word" that David was hiding in his heart was the spoken Word that he heard in his spirit.  It was directly spoken into him by Holy Spirit.  David had no written "Word" to "study."

Unfortunately, Bible colleges and seminaries tend to produce formulas and doctrines.  When the formulas fail, and the lives of those people who depend on the pastor or church leader crash, condemnation sets in.  Because the "minister" has put his or her dependence on formulas and doctrines which are ingrained into the very core of his existence -- in the name of putting that dependence in the Lord -- the "minister" now feels that the Lord has failed him.  Despair sets in, depression reigns, and questions arise by the multitude.  What's the problem?

The "minister" never heard from the Lord.  Much of his upbringing and preparation for "ministry" was predicated on "profane, empty babblings which only serve to advance ungodliness." 

I'll never forget the day that I asked the pastor of a large church how the Lord called him into the ministry.  He looked rather blank at me, stammered and stuttered around momentarily, and then said, "It just seemed like a good occupation for me to go to, and the pay looked pretty good, so I went to seminary."  When I tried to explain the call of the Bridegroom, and the absolute knowing that happens in one's spirit when you hear that call, it was apparent that I was speaking a language he did not understand at all.

Sadly, those who sit under these teachers receive a mix of truth with poison.  Taken to its logical extension, it results in "Christians" who have a name that they are alive, when in fact they are dead.  It is nothing less than the spectacular grace and mercy of God that many have survived this era in the life of the Body of Christ to come to a place of recognizing the reality of a love relationship with the Lord, and have responded -- even within the limited framework of their understanding.  Fortunately, the Lord is greater -- much greater -- than the church, the structure, and the doctrines of men; and He leads those on who follow by faith.

That's where we'll go next time.

"We are called to be heirs of God in Christ. There is no higher calling in all of creation. Everything happening in our lives is intended to prepare us for this high calling by working in us Christ's nature.  Christ is the answer to every human problem, and He is the answer to every problem we're now facing.  It is not just that He has the answers, but He is the answer.  If we are living in the knowledge that the One we serve is over all rule and authority and dominion, how can we fear?  Every challenge is an opportunity to grow in faith, so a key to the victorious life is to not waste our trials.  (Prophetic Word from Rick Joyner)

Blessings on you!

Regner

Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES

709 South 7th Street
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 515-0133


All Coffee Break articles are copyright by Regner A. Capener, but authorization for reprinting, reposting, copying or re-use, in whole or in part, is granted – provided proper attribution and this notice are included intact.  Older Coffee Break archives are now available at http://regnersrangers.multiply.com/journal/ and are being slowly added at http://www.AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.  Coffee Break articles are normally published weekly.

If you would like to have these articles arrive each morning in your email, please send a blank email to: Subscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.comTo unsubscribe, send a blank email to Unsubscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.

CAPENER MINISTRIES is a tax-exempt church ministry. Should you desire to participate and covenant with us as partners in this ministry, please contact us at either of the above email or physical addresses, or visit http://www.RiverWorshipCenter.org.