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EDUCATION: Holt High School, Holt Mich., Lansing Community College, Southwestern Theological Seminary, National Apostolic Bible College. MINISTERIAL EXPERIENCE:61 years of pastoral experience, 11 churches in Arizona, New Mexico and Florida. Missionary work in Costa Rica. Bishop of the Districts of New Mexico and Florida for the Apostolic Assembly. Taught at the Apostolic Bible College of Florida and the Apostolic Bible College of Arizona. Served as President of the Florida Apostolic Bible College. Served as Secretary of Education in Arizona and New Mexico.EDUCACIÓN:Holt High School, Holt Michigan, Lansing Community College, Seminario Teológico Southwestern, Colegio Bíblico Nacional. EXPERIENCIA MINISTERIAL:51 años de experiencia pastoral, 11 iglesias en los estados de Arizona, Nuevo México y la Florida. Trabajo misionera en Costa Rica. Obispo de la Asamblea Apostólica en los distritos de Nuevo México y La Florida. He enseñado en el Colegio Bíblico Apostólico de la Florida y el Colegio Bíblico Apostólico de Arizona. Presidente del Colegio Bíblico de la Florida. Secretario de Educación en los distritos de Nuevo México y Arizona.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

THE CONSEQUENCES OF FORGIVEN SIN





“Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile. When I kept silence, my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long. For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me: my moisture is turned into the drought of summer. I acknowledge my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord; and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin.” Psalms 32:1-5

One element of spiritual maturity is realizing the horror of sin. It brings great tragedy and consequences. God will forgive our sins. In His grace He forgives; in His government we face the consequences. God requires that we reap what we sow. 

Temptation is not sin, but to cultivate temptation and to yield to it is. Sin is usually a process, and David went through several stages that led to his sin:

1) David laid down his armor. (II Samuel 11, Ephesians 6)

2) David was not looking to God.

3. David did not watch and pray.

4) David was alone.

5) David ignored God's Word.

6) David did not depend upon the Spirit.

Commit these six stages to memory and read Ephesians 6. Don't make the same mistakes David made. Never cultivate a temptation with a view to yielding to sin. Meditate on the Word of God, obey it and guard your heart with its truth. Stay in fellowship with the Lord.  (Psalm 51:18-19)

There are number of Greek words which are translated sin in the New Testament. Here are four of them:

A. Hamartia: Missing the mark (Romans 5:12).

B. Hamartama: Doing an evil deed (I Corinthians 6:18).

C. Paraptoma: Differing from the path (Matthew 6:14).

D. Parabasis: Stepping across a know boundary (Romans 5:14).

Most believers think that sin is just sin and that there is no difference it is all the same. The truth is that there is a big and important difference. The Word of God uses various words to describe sin and to distinguish the different types of sin: transgression, sin, iniquity and deceit.  

These four things: transgression, sin, iniquity and deceit, are four different types of sin and they have to be dealt with in different ways.

A. Transgression (parabasis): To go beyond a known limit. Before the Law there was sin but no transgression.

B. Sin (hamartia): To miss the mark, to fall short of what God wants us to do.

C. Iniquity (hamartama): Lawlessness, a person will not obey the law of God or man. Making excuses for sin.  (Matthew 7:22-23)

D. Deceit (paraptoma): Guile, cunning, guilt. Deceit is concealment or distortion of the truth for the purpose of misleading.

In Psalms 32:5 we see how David dealt with these four:

A. He acknowledged his sin

B. He did not hid his iniquity

C. He confessed his transgression

D. He acknowledged the deceitfulness of his sin (the iniquity of my sin)

These four things can also be seen in Psalms 51.

There are many believers who, because they do not know the difference between these four and how to deal with them; have been forgiven but have not had their joy restored.

The main objective of a believer that has sinned is to go past and beyond forgiveness and have his joy and his place in God restored. Forgiveness is not the issue. God will forgive, that’s His nature.

There is a joy of knowing our sins are forgiven, but there is a greater joy of having the approval of God towards us restored. Many believers have never known this joy.

In Psalms 51:11 the words “Thy Presence” means from his face. God’s face is not forgiveness, but his favor (acceptance or approval).

One of the problems that a backslider faces when he comes back to God is that he knows he has been forgiven, but he doesn’t have the joy that he once had in the Lord.

He expects God to fill him with joy the moment he confesses and repents of his sins. How can God give him joy if he has disappointed Him? He has to earn God's favor once again. I don’t know how a believer who has sinned and has not been restored to God’s favor can live in peace: “Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; and uphold me with thy free spirit” Psalm 51:12.

When you are out of God’s favor you don’t have joy or liberty. You worship with your body and soul, but your spirit will not worship. The reason is because there is guilt and you are out of God’s favor.

Praise is the first thing to return to you when God gives you joy and it is the first thing to go when you sin (Psalms 51:15).

When we hide our transgression, we began to feel the weight of transgression upon us (Psalms 32:3-4). The weight of transgression is meant to drive us to confession (Proverbs 28:13).


Tuesday, May 13, 2014

¿POR QUÉ NOS HACE ESPERAR DIOS?


“Pacientemente esperé a Jehová, Y se inclinó a mí, y oyó mi clamor.” Salmo 40:1

“Pero los que esperan a Jehová tendrán nuevas fuerzas; levantarán alas como las águilas; correrán, y no se cansarán; caminarán, y no se fatigarán.” Isaías 40:31

La mayoría de la gente no puede soportar la espera. La espera es un verdadero problema para la mayoría de nosotros. ¿Por qué tenemos problemas con la espera? La mayoría de nosotros estamos dispuestos a hacer cualquier cosa para Dios, pero no esperar. ¿Por qué Dios muchas veces nos hace esperar? Algunos han llamado a esta "la edad de microondas." Queremos todo al momento. No es así con el Señor. El tiene su tiempo para todo. 

Si vamos a crecer en el Señor, vamos a tener que aprender el secreto de esperar en Dios. El apresurar a Dios es encontrar fallas en él. Dios nunca llega tarde, pero no siempre viene cuando usted lo quiere que el  venga.

¿Se ha enojado alguna vez usted con Dios o se ha frustrado porque Él no hizo lo qué usted pensó que Él debería hacer cuando usted pensó que Él debería haberlo hecho?

TRES RAZONES POR LAS QUE DIOS NOS REQUIERE ESPERAR

A. Para Condicionar La Facultad Humana Para Recibir (Éxodo 24:12-16)

La espera es un acondicionamiento que prepara el espíritu humano para recibir de Dios. Como Moisés en el Monte Sinaí y los Discípulos en el Día de Pentecostés ellos tuvieron que esperar en Dios para recibir. La mayoría de nosotros nunca podría recibir lo que Dios tiene para nosotros hasta que él nos ha pasado por un tiempo de espera.

B. PARA CALMAR EL ESPÍRITU HUMANO AGITADO (Salmo 37:7)

La mayoría de la gente podría encontrar a Dios y oír Su voz si ellos se calmaran, estuvieran quietos y dejar a su espíritu humano  que se calmara. Un espíritu humano acalorado puede causar más confusión que cualquier demonio.

C. PARA ENSEÑAR REVERENCIA A UN DIOS SANTO (Habacuc 2:20)

Hemos perdido nuestro sentido de la reverencia. Tenemos que descubrir la presencia de Dios y  su majestad. Tenemos que aprender a acercarnos a Dios con reverencia y esperar en silencio para escuchar lo que tiene que decir. Debemos reconocer que Él está en control y sabe lo que está haciendo.

Un hombre aprendió una lección cuando él fue a Disneylandia con sus hijos. Él llegó al parque antes de que se abriera. Había estado lloviendo esa mañana, muy pocas personas estaban allí. Ellos entraron y comenzaron a ir a los diferentes paseos. Ellos llegaron al primer paseo y entraron inmediatamente porque no había ninguna línea. Ellos fueron al siguiente paseo y encontraron la misma cosa otra vez; ninguna línea, ninguna espera. ¡Entonces ellos fueron a su paseo favorito y no había ninguna línea! Ellos no lo podían creer, ninguna línea y ninguna espera. Ellos entraron sin tener que esperar. Después del paseo, ellos se fueron a otro paseo. Su hija de 12 años lo miró y dijo, “Este no es la diversión, esto no parece Disneylandia hoy, hay muy pocas gente aquí y no es tan divertido”.
Mientras ellos caminaban por el parque revisando unos paseos más, el clima comenzó a despejar, el sol salió y más gente comenzó a aparecer en el parque. Ellos volvieron para montar su paseo favorito otra vez. Esta vez ellos tuvieron que esperar un rato porque había una línea de gente. Esta vez tuvieron que esperar 15 minutos. Después de que ellos montaron el paseo, todos ellos  dijeron, “¡guau, que tremendo! Esto fue más divertido que la primera vez”.

Entonces se dio cuenta, por qué fue más divertido. Fue porque, ellos tuvieron que esperar. La espera realmente hizo el paseo mejor. De la misma manera, Dios nos hace esperar por cosas porque él quiere hacerlas mejor para nosotros. ¡Él notó otra cosa, que los mejores paseos tenían las líneas más largas! ¡Así que, tal vez lo mejor que Dios tiene para nosotros tiene la espera más larga!   


   

WHY DOES GOD MAKE US WAIT?





“I waited patiently for the LORD; and he inclined unto me, and heard my cry.” Psalms 40:1
“But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.” Isaiah 40:31
Most people cannot stand waiting. Waiting is a real problem for most of us. Why do we have problems with waiting? Most of us are ready and willing to do anything for God, but not waiting. Why does God many times make us wait?  Some have called this the “microwave age.” We want everything right now. It is not that way with God. He has his time for everything.

If we are going to grow in the Lord, we are going to have to learn the secret of waiting on God. To hurry God is to find fault in Him. God is never late, but He does not always come when you want Him too.

Have you ever gotten angry with God or frustrated because He did not do what you thought He should do when you thought He should do it?

THREE REASONS WHY GOD REQUIRES US TO WAIT

A. TO CONDITION THE HUMAN FACULTY TO RECEIVE (Exodus 24:12-16)

The waiting time is a conditioning that prepares the human spirit to receive from God. Like Moses on Mount Sinai and the Disciples on the Day of Pentecost they had to wait on God to receive. Most of us could never receive what God has for us until he has put us through a time of waiting.

B. TO SETTLE THE RESTLESS HUMAN SPIRIT (Psalms 37:7)

Most people could find God and hear His voice if they would just set still, be quit and let their human spirit settle. A heated human spirit can cause more confusion than any demon.

C. TO TEACH REVERENCE FOR A HOLY GOD (Habakkuk 2:20)

We have lost our sense of reverence. We need to discover God’s presence and majesty. We must learn to approach God reverently and wait silently to hear what He has to say. We must acknowledge that He is in control and knows what he is doing.

A man learned a lesson when he went to Disney Land with his children. He arrived at the park before it opened. It had been raining that morning, very few people were there. They went in and started to go to the different rides. They made their first stop and walked right in because there was no line. They went to the next ride and found the same thing again; no line, no waiting. Then they went to their favorite ride and there was no line! They couldn’t believe it, no line and no waiting. They walked right in. After they rode, they started waking to another ride. His 12 year old daughter looked at him and said, “This is not fun, it doesn’t feel like Disney Land today, there are very few people here and it’s not as much fun”. As they checked out a few more rides, the weather started to clear up, the sun came out and more people started to show up in the park.

They went back to ride their favorite ride again. This time they had to wait for a while because there was a line of people. They waited for 15 minutes. After they rode the ride, they all said, “Wow that was great. It was more fun than the first time”. Then it hit him. Why was it more fun, because, they had to wait? The wait actually made the ride better. In the same way, God makes us wait for things because He wants to make them better for us. He noticed another thing, that the best rides had the longest lines! So maybe the best God has for us has the longest wait!