Wednesday, September 6, 2017

It’s Not a Magic Spell

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; – Col 3:16

I once found it hard understanding an agitated woman who was telling me that that she saw her enemy being chased in her dream. I felt she must really be a nice woman for showing that much concern for her enemy’s welfare. It took me a while to realise that she was the “enemy” being chased in the dream!

As we established earlier, the power in the words we speak come from God Himself. There is no “Law” or “force” embedded in the fabric of the Universe that automatically brings the words we speak into existence.

The negative things we say come to pass because the Devil exploits those unguarded utterances to wreak havoc in our lives; and in the same vein the positive things we say happen because God is honouring His promise to bring them to pass. There’re no neutral, disembodied “forces” in the Universe!

Understanding this vital truth will stop Believers from being creepy with their confessions. It is not an abomination to tell your boss that you’re “sick”. Paul explicitly stated that he left Trophimus at Miletus SICK; (2Ti 4:20). Some today would have accused Paul of weak faith for using that word. (We forget that, at least among charismatic circles, it’s now semantically pointless to say you’re “strong” when the hearer understands that to mean that you are “sick”).

Confession is not a religious mantra or a magical spell. I’ve seen Believers blow their top at the ATM queue because someone asked if they were the “LAST”. They fume and counter that nobody should ever call them “last”.
Beloved, if you know who you are in Christ, you’ll not be scared of politely telling anybody your position in a queue. Confession isn’t a talisman in your mouth – a kind of “I-Command” juju that automatically creates whatever you utter no matter its semantic meaning; confession is an affirmation of what God says about you in scripture.

We mustn’t let our religious exercise become a bad testimony for the Gospel. People should hear soundness – not weirdness – in our speech.

There’s a place for positive confession. There’s also a place for clarity of thought. God has not given us the spirit of fear (which is actually what those weird word-twisting is all about); but of power, and of love, and of a SOUND MIND. (2Ti 1:7).

AMEN.
More Blessings await you today; you’ll not miss them in Jesus’ Name.

GREG ELKAN

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