OMER DEVOTIONAL

THE OMER DEVOTIONAL

A 50-day devotional journey to discover your role in the end-time revival of Israel
and God’s plans to gather the Jewish People back to the Land of Israel.

“See, I will gather them out of all the countries, where I have driven them in My anger, My fury, and great wrath, and I will bring them back to this place and cause them to dwell securely. They will be My people, and I will be their God. I will give them one heart and one way, so they may fear Me forever; for their good and for their children after them. I will make an everlasting covenant with them: I will never turn away from doing good for them. I will put My fear in their hearts, so that they will not depart from Me. “Yes, I will delight in doing good for them, and with all My heart and all My soul I will in truth plant them in this land.” (Jeremiah 32:37-41)

 

Please consider making a donation to Mission Discipleship’s Israel Mandate if this devotional blesses you…
(No gift is too small – whatever you can do to help us would be a great blessing.)

ONE ANOTHERS

ONE-ANOTHERS

www.perfect-word.org ©2014 Perfect Word Ministries

This series of scriptures teaches us how God wants us to relate to one another.
We suggest studying the Scriptures and discussing how you can apply them in your life with your Discipleship Partner or in a Group.

The Scriptures teach us to render true judgment to one another (Zec.7:9)
The Scriptures teach us to show loving-kindness to one another (Zec.7:9)
The Scriptures teach us to show compassion to one another (Zec.7:9)
The Scriptures teach us to not speak against one another (Ja.4:11)
The Scriptures teach us to not grumble against one another (Ja.5:9)
The Scriptures teach us to confess your sins to one another (Ja.5:16)
The Scriptures teach us to be praying for one another (Ja.5:16)
The Scriptures teach us to be hospitable without grumbling to one another (1Pe.4:9)
The Scriptures teach us to exhort one another every day (Heb.3:13)
The Scriptures teach us to provoke one another to love and to good actions not forsaking the gathering
of ourselves together (Heb.10:24)
The Scriptures teach us to diligently oversee one another so that no one will fail to partake of the unmerited
favor of God (Heb.12:15)
The Scriptures teach us to serve one another through love (Ga.5:13)
The Scriptures teach us to carry the burdens of one another (Ga.6:2)
The Scriptures teach us to encourage and build up one another (1Th.5:11, cf. Ro.14:19)
The Scriptures teach us to have the same anxiety for one another (1Co.12:25)
The Scriptures teach us to greet one another in a holy kiss (2Co.13:12, cf. 1Pe.5:14, Ro.16:16)
The Scriptures teach us to go before (or outdo) one another in showing honor (Ro.12:10)
The Scriptures teach us to not judge one another (Ro.14:13, cf. Jn. 12:47-48)
The Scriptures teach us to have the same mind toward one another (Ro.12:16, 15:5)
The Scriptures teach us to receive one another, as the Messiah also received us (Ro.15:7)
The Scriptures teach us to teach and warn one another [speaking] in melodies, and praises, and spiritual songs
(Col.3:16, Ep. 5:19, cf. Ro.15:14)
The Scriptures teach us to bear with and forgive one another in love (Col.3:13, Ep.4:2, 4:32)
The Scriptures teach us to become kind and tender-hearted to one another (Ep.4:32)
The Scriptures teach us to submit yourselves to one another (1Pe.5:5, Ep.5:21)
The Scriptures teach us to count one another higher than yourselves (Ph. 2:3)
The Scriptures teach us to love one another, intensely out of a pure heart (Jn.13:34-5, 1Pe.1:22, cf. 1Pe.4:8, 1Thes.3:12, 4:9)
The Scriptures teach us to tenderly love one another in the love of brothers (Ro.12:10)
The Scriptures teach us to owe no one anything, except to love one another (Ro.13:8)

How will you apply these scriptures in your relationships with others in the Body of Messiah?  Be specific.

THE OUTLINE OF PRAYER

The Outline of Prayer

By Larry Stockstill

The grace (favor and spiritual blessing) of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the presence and fellowship (the communion and sharing together, and participation) in the Holy Spirit be with you all. Amen (so be it). (2 Cor. 13:14)

This is the last verse of 2 Corinthians and an outline of prayer.

Focus in on the love of God. Think about the goodness of a Father who loves you. Tell Him “You’re a good Father. It’s who You are!” Enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise. Sing songs of praise to Him. Exalt Him. Tell Him how good and wonderful He is. Do you know how powerful God is? He is so powerful and mighty. You can’t even see Him yet He counts the hairs of your head. He calls the stars by name. Come before Him and talk about how much He loves you and how much you love Him.

Shift to Jesus and the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. Thank God for the cross of Jesus. Each day see Him in your mind being nailed to the cross. Thank Him for taking the nails in His hands and feet, and His suffering on the cross for six hours in payment for your sins. See Him on the whipping post and see Him taking the stripes and being willing to have his flesh torn from His back for the healing of your sicknesses and diseases. Thank Him and praise Him! See the empty tomb and Him rising from the dead, victorious over death, hell and the grave. See Him ascending to heaven and sitting down at the right hand of God with every demon power under His foot and subjected to His Name.

Then see Him giving you His armor and saying “wear this. Wear My armor!” Put on His Helmet of salvation – Breastplate of righteousness – Belt of Truth – Shoes of Peace – Shield of Faith – Sword of the Spirit. (Eph. 6)

Stand in His might and in His power. Look at Jesus in His beauty. His eyes are like fire. His hair like wool. His robe is white. His girdle is gold. His feet are brass. Thank Him for His grace, mercy, forgiveness and healing. Thank Him for His mighty power and for interceding at the right hand of the Father.

Greet the Holy Spirit. “Good morning Holy Spirit. Thank You that You live inside of me. You’re my might, my power, my counsel, my wisdom and understanding.” Go through the fruit of the Holy Spirit. (Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.) (Gal. 5) Ask Him to help you with each one of them. Go through the gifts of the Holy Spirit. Ask Him to use you in each one. (Wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, miracles, prophecy, discerning of spirits, speaking in tongues, interpretation of tongues) (1 Cor. 12) Go through the anointing of the Holy Spirit and ask Him to use you in each one. (Wisdom and understanding, counsel and might, knowledge and the fear of the LORD. (Isaiah 11:2) (Also see Romans 12:3-8 for other gifts of grace.)

Be free to sing and dance before the Lord. Love God and receive His Love. Thank the Lord Jesus and receive His grace. Invite the Holy Spirit and walk in His power every day!

OVERCOMING SIN

Overcoming Sin

 

We must know the truth of what God’s Word says about our position in Christ so that we can have victory over issues in our life where the devil tries to trick us into believing lies, which result in sin.
Romans 5:20-21

God’s whole purpose in the plan of salvation was to save us from sin.
Romans 6:1-11

If we died with Christ we believe that we will also live with him. Christ was raised from the dead and cannot die again. Death no longer has mastery over him. The death he died, he died to sin once for all; but the life he lives, he lives to God.

The words “we will also live with him” refer to an experience of resurrection life here and now. There is a future resurrection and the same union of the believer with Christ that we have been talking about is a guarantee of it. But that is not what these verses are about. They refer to Jesus’ passage from a world where death reigned to the sphere of resurrection life. They refer to our passage from the reign of death to the reign of grace, to a present resurrection. This is what Paul said of himself in Philippians, where he wrote, “I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection” (Philippians 3:10). He meant that he wanted to be victorious over sin.

This is the first time Paul urges his readers to do anything in the book of Romans. The Greek word for “count” in this verse is “logizomai” which is important because it means something that is reality, that is, with things as they truly are. It has nothing to do with wishful thinking. Paul’s starting point for exhorting us is counting as true what God has Himself already done for us. Sanctification begins with knowledge. The first step in growing in holiness is counting as true what is in fact true. Sanctification is knowing that God has taken us out of Adam and has joined us to Jesus Christ and then beginning to live that way. The secret to a holy life is believing God.

Colossians 2:9-15

“Triumphing”

.
When Jesus died on the cross and rose from the dead, He won the victory over the devil once and for all. The completeness of what Jesus accomplished for us is not clearly understood by many Christians today and as a result they spend an excessive amount of their life fighting a war that has already been won for them. God isn’t asking us to win the war again over the devil – that’s ancient history. He wants us to believe what truly happened 2000 years ago and use that victory in our daily lives to keep the devil in a bound condition. That is what triumphing is all about. By disarming the powers God took the devil’s guns away from him and stripped him of his ability to do what he had formerly done to the human race. Then God boldly and publicly showed that satan is no longer allowed to ravage mankind, provided we will accept Christ and His finished Work in our lives and live on God’s terms.

.
Paul takes his language here from the Roman customs of that time. When a Roman general defeated his opponent in war, the Roman Senate arranged a triumph for him upon his victorious return to Rome. A giant procession was organized, led by the conquering general. He was dressed in all his finery and placed in a magnificent chariot pulled by 2 beautiful white horses. The defeated general and all his underlings who had survived the war were stripped naked, bound and chained to the back of the conquering general’s chariot. This was purposely done to show the people they had nothing to fear from this defeated enemy from that time on. The procession then advanced through the streets of Rome as the citizens cheered the winning general. After his chariot passed by, cheers turned to shouts of derision for the conquered for who followed. People insulted them, spit upon them and hit them with rocks; absolutely humiliating this enemy who had had the gall to believe he could defeat the mighty Roman empire.

.
Applying this scenario to Christ’s victory over the devil, symbolically speaking, God put Jesus in the chariot and chained the devil and his demon hordes to the back of the chariot. And they are still there if we understand what God’s Word says.
Because we are “in” Christ, according to Romans 8:1-2, we are in the chariot with Christ Jesus, enjoying the spoils of winning the war! That is the reason we don’t have to beg God for what has already been accomplished. We aren’t’ standing on the sidelines, hoping a small part of the victory will rub off on us by chance. We are always triumphant in Christ! The reason some Christians have so much trouble with the devil and suffer assaults through fear, sickness, depression, sin and want is that they are believing the devil’s version of what their position is in Christ more than what God tells them about it in His Word.

.
We are expressly commanded to “Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.” The wrestling match or battle or spiritual warfare that we are engaged in today revolves around this area of deception or illusions which the devil uses to trick us into believing his lies about the situation instead of God’s Truth. When the devil tries to put his symptoms of fear and sickness on us, we need to battle them with the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God.

When the devil says he’s going to kill us or our children, we say “No, you’re not because God’s Word says this and this. Now get out of here in the Name of Jesus!”

Keep the devil behind the chariot where he belongs! He will try to pull us out of the chariot with his tricks. In fact some Christians are bound behind the chariot and the devil is running loose in their lives, stealing, killing and destroying, because they don’t understand it is their right, as a child of God, to keep the devil in a constant state of bondage! The fact is that the devil is terrified of true disciples who stay in the chariot, believing God more than anything else.

Being in relationship with God means that He will continually be purifying us and showing us areas of sin in our lives.  In humility we’re to ask His Holy Spirit help us to be holy, as God is holy.  This continual work of sanctification is a process that we walk in our entire lives.

Part of our on-going battle against sin in our lives involves our recognizing the lies that we’re believing and replacing those with the truths found in God’s Word. Spend time with God today and ask Him what in your life He considers as sin.  Then ask the Lord to help you by the power of His Word and His Spirit to turn away from that sin. Let this be the pattern of your life.  God exalts the humble and draws them near to Himself.  In the nearness of God’s holy Presence sin melts away by the power of His infinite Love.

PASSOVER SEDER HAGADDAH

The Haggadah (Hebrew: הַגָּדָה‎‎, “telling”; plural: Haggadot) is a Jewish text that sets forth the order of the Passover Seder. … Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews also apply the term Haggadah to the service itself, as it constitutes the act of “telling your son.” Click below to download Mission Discipleship’s Messianic Passover Seder Haggadah to use in your family’s Passover Memorial Celebration.

Remembering the Passover