Skip to main content

“At some point, you’ve got to stop watching clouds.”

A thought by Mark Batterson from his book, Double Blessing (p. 114). The Crown Publishing Group. Kindle Edition. (Click on the book title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.)

Mark explains, “The technical term is nephelococcygia, in case you care. If you have a dream that is gathering dust, you need to seed the clouds with a step of faith. The last two words of Mark’s gospel are ‘signs following.’ (Mark 16:20, KJV) We wish they were ‘signs preceding,’ right? It would be so much easier!  We also wish the Lord’s Prayer said, ‘Give us this year our yearly bread.’ Why? Because then we wouldn’t have to trust God on a daily basis! God loves us too much to short-circuit our daily dependence on Him with too much of anything.”

Mark goes on, “I have no doubt that God is preparing good works in advance. (Ephesians 2:10) But more often than not, we’ve got to take a step of faith in the direction of that good work. It would have been much easier for the disciples to stay in the comfortable confines of Jerusalem, right? But they obeyed the Great Commission, which called them to step out in faith and preach the Resurrection everywhere they went. The net result? Signs followed.

“Wouldn’t it be so much easier if God would pave the way with signs preceding? Rather than confirming the proclamation of the gospel after the fact? According to human logic, it would be. But that would rob us of the opportunity to participate in the miracle by exercising our faith, wouldn’t it? Sure, God does many miracles in advance. But more often than not, we have to seed the clouds just like the first-century disciples did.

“The counterintuitive command God gives Joshua before the parting of the Jordan River is a great example of ‘Go, set, ready’:

Joshua 3:8, “Tell the priests who carry the ark of the covenant: ‘When you reach the edge of the Jordan’s waters, go and stand in the river.’ ”

Mark then says, “We want God to part the river before we step into it. Why? So our shoes don’t get wet. We want God to go first so it doesn’t require any faith. But this is where so many of us get stuck spiritually. We’re waiting for God to part the waters, while God is waiting for us to step into the river! Seeding the clouds is taking a step of faith and getting your feet wet, but let me back up one step.”

Mark says, “Prayer is the way we write history before it happens. It’s the difference between letting things happen and making things happen. It’s the difference between us fighting for God and God fighting for us!”

It all starts with prayer, doesn’t it? 

Yes, yes!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

"Lie 2: The more you worry about it, the better your odds of avoiding it."

A thought by Louie Giglio in his book,   Winning the War on Worry    (p. 5). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition. (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Here is another lie that the Enemy uses with us. And Louie says, "This is a tricky lie. Yes, we often have cause for concern and preparation. But the Enemy wants you to believe that if you worry or fret over a certain outcome long enough, you can keep something bad from happening." But this is so important to realize. He says, "The reality is worrying has never once prevented something negative from happening. Planning might. Prayer has. But worry never will." He continues, "The Enemy tells you that by worrying about a situation (or every situation) you can make your tomorrow better. Really, worry just robs you of today. Jesus implored us: 'I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body mor...

“Hurry and love are incompatible.”

A thought by John Mark Comer from his book, The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry (p. 23). The Crown Publishing Group. Kindle Edition. (Click on the book title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.) Wow, pretty strong thought isn’t it? John says, “All my worst moments as a father, a husband, and a pastor, even as a human being, are when I’m in a hurry—late for an appointment, behind on my unrealistic to-do list, trying to cram too much into my day. I ooze anger, tension, a critical nagging—the antitheses of love. If you don’t believe me, next time you’re trying to get your type B wife and three young, easily distracted children out of the house and you’re running late (a subject on which I have a wealth of experience), just pay attention to how you relate to them. Does it look and feel like love? Or is it far more in the vein of agitation, anger, a biting comment, a rough glare? Hurry and love are oil and water: they simply do not mix.” He goes on, “Hence, in the apostle P...

“There’s a big difference between building a castle and building a kingdom.”

A thought by Bob Goff from his book, Everybody, Always: Becoming Love in a World Full of Setbacks and Difficult People ( p. 41). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition. (Click on the book title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.)   Have you ever built a sand castle or maybe a Lego castle?   Have you? Bob says, “We actually build castles all the time, out of our jobs and our families and the things we’ve purchased. Sometimes we even make them out of each other. Some of these castles are impressive too. Lots of people come to admire what we’ve built over the course of our lives and tell us what great castles we have. But Jesus told His friends we weren’t supposed to spend our lives building castles. He said He wanted us to build a kingdom, and there’s a big difference between building a castle and building a kingdom.” Bob goes on, “You see, castles have moats to keep creepy people out, but kingdoms have bridges to let everyone in. Castles have dungeons for people who ha...