If You’re Called as a Prophet, Then You’re Called to Do This
If Jesus has called you as a prophet, then He has called you to LEAD and INTERCEDE within your sphere of authority. Every prophet is given an assignment that has borders.
If Jesus has called you as a prophet, then He has called you to LEAD and INTERCEDE within your sphere of authority. Every prophet is given an assignment that has borders.
Since the launch of the modern Pentecostal movement from Azusa Street 110 years ago in Los Angeles, man’s attempts to harness the global expansion of the Acts 2 experience have taken multiple routes. From Azusa was birthed several contemporary denominations, such as the Assembly of God and Church of God in Christ. Other movements came to embrace the Charismatic outpouring, all with seemingly sincere intentions to unite the Body of Christ through the Holy Spirit.
Groping for this unity through the decades, much of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement has ultimately come with divisions, with groups splintering off, many times over the slightest of differences of interpretation or experience.
Gathering in London this week is the Empowered21 Global Council, a group with a significant grasp on bringing unity to the Evangelical and Pentecostal influence. Leaders of churches, organizations, ministries and institutions are gathering for two days to reflect and visualize the future of the half billion adherents of the Pentecostal movement.
Not the first time this group has gathered, the E21 Global Council was formed as an outgrowth of the celebration of the Azusa Street Revival, which took place in Los Angeles in 1906 and was commemorated during a centennial event in 2006 with over 50,000 charismatic believers from around the globe. From that gathering came 17 “conversations” taking place in strategic locations across six continents. From these meetings came the first Empowered21 conference in 2010 on the Tulsa, Oklahoma campus of Oral Roberts University.
“What we found is there is a hunger for these kinds of unifying meetings to take place around the world,” according to Dr. Billy Wilson, who serves as co-chair of the Empowered21 Global Council along with Dr. George Wood, superintendent of the Assembly of God. “It was vital that we establish a mission, vision and a five-part purpose statement to guide us as we navigate the drastically different global streams of this movement.”
“Trying to import a North American Christianity around the world is not the answer,” Wilson told Tuesday’s E21 Global Council session.
Wilson, who also serves as president of Oral Roberts University, outlined the established structure and foundation of E21, which includes 14 regional teams or cabinets, the most recent of which is Eastern Europe established earlier this year. According to Wilson, leaders of these teams are prayerfully chosen for their authenticity, integrity and spiritual experience and charged with upholding five “descriptors” of E21: Holy Spirit, Future, Next Generation, Unity and World Evangelization.
Wilson said, “We are different in a lot of ways, but there are some aspects of this movement (E21) which we must all agree upon and they are 1) Jesus is the only way to salvation, 2) the Holy Spirit is alive and at work today, 3) the world is to be evangelized and 4) the next generation needs to understand and be connected with this movement.” Wilson stated the purpose of the Global Council is to give spiritual oversight to this worldwide network of leaders.
The Global Council concludes on Wednesday, May11 prior to the opening service of London 2016, a three-day celebration to be held in the historic Gaumont Theatre in downtown London.
More information on Empowered21 can be found at www.empowered21.com.
(Source: Empowered21)
Consumers became more pessimistic during the last month. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index fell from a March estimate of 96.1 to an April estimate of 94.2.
The index measures the attitudes of consumers regarding current and future business conditions, incomes and employment. Confidence is believed to be related to spending. Since consumption, or consumer spending, comprises about two-thirds of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the index is followed closely.
Confidence is an important indicator of future success in just about anything. It has been shown to be an important indicator of achievement in school, performance by athletes, management success, leadership effectiveness and profitable long-lasting entrepreneurial ventures. Without confidence, too many lack the endurance to complete the task. Others will not put forth the extra effort to make a venture successful. Some will not even start the new undertaking, because they do not believe they will succeed.
Confidence is a belief in victory. Whether on the athletic field, in the classroom, on the job, in a business environment or on a platform, confidence expects that one’s efforts will triumph.
Confidence is the hope that all can be overcome regardless of the obstacles. Confidence creates a peace within oneself and an assurance to others. Confidence is not arrogance or brashness; it is a knowing that things will be OK.
In the world, self-confidence is misplaced. If our confidence is based solely on what we can see, we are limited. We are designed for something more. Specifically, we are called to replace our confidence in ourselves with confidence in God. With Him, no issue is too great. No challenge is too daunting. Nothing that we face in this life is impossible. All things have a solution.
“But Jesus looked at them and said, ‘With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible'” (Matt. 19:26, MEV).
In the world, our past and current circumstances matter. Childhood abuse and/or neglect, rejection by others, sins, criminal activities, a multitude of debts and few skills can dramatically hinder self-confidence and the abundant life in the natural. But in the kingdom, we are new creatures and everything has become new.
“Therefore, if any man is in Christ, he is a new creature. Old things have passed away. Look, all things have become new” (2 Cor. 5:17, MEV).
In the kingdom, we should be the most confident of all peoples because our confidence is not limited to our abilities. We are sons and daughters of the Most High God. We have the right to use the Name that is above all names. We have the third member of the Godhead residing in us. We have a book of promises that are 100 percent reliable. We have a Father and King who loves us more than we can imagine. We have the full resources of heaven at our disposal. He has promised us the grace to help in time of need.
“Let us then come with confidence to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need” (Heb. 4:16, MEV).
We are confident that when we ask according to His will, he hears us and will give us our requests. It does not say that all prayers will be answered. Prayers that are guided by the lusts of our flesh, the lusts of our eyes or the pride of life are not of the Father. There is no promise they will be answered.
“For all that is in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—is not of the Father, but is of the world” (1 John 2:16, MEV).
“This is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. So if we know that He hears whatever we ask, we know that we have whatever we asked of Him” (1 John 5:14-15, MEV).
Let us have confidence in our God and pray according to His revealed will.
Dr. James R. Russell is professor of economics and chair of the Undergraduate College of Business at Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
(Source: Ministry Today)
Preparations are ongoing for the 76th Church of God International General Assembly scheduled for July 19-22, 2016. In less than three months, thousands of delegates will converge on the city of Nashville, Tennessee, “Music City.”
With a new, city comes concerns about the logistics of navigating where the General Assembly has not been held previously. However, Nashville, and the Assembly venue, Music City Center (MCC), offers an abundance of accessibility and transportation options.
First of all, more than 1,000 hotel rooms are located within a three block radius of the MCC. Most delegates will be able to easily access the MCC from either the 5th Avenue or Demonbreun entrances.
For those driving in, over 1,000 covered parking spaces are located at MCC. Downtown more than 28,000 parking spaces make it easy to bring a car downtown. Broadway, downtown’s main thoroughfare, bisects numbered avenues into north and south. Most corporate offices and government agencies are north of Broadway. For more downtown parking information, please visit parkitdowntown.com.
The Metro Transit Authority (MTA) provides hourly bus service between downtown and the airport seven days a week. Downtown circulator buses, called the Music City Circuit provide free transportation Monday through Saturday. The Green Circuit carries passengers between downtown and the Gulch, while the Blue Circuit serves key destinations between the Schermerhorn Symphony Center and Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park. Music City Central, the downtown transit station, is located at 400 Charlotte Avenue. For more information, call 615-862-5950 or visit nashvillemta.org.
Ride share services, such as UBER and others are active in Nashville. Simply download the app and request a ride. A nearby driver will be dispatched to your location within minutes. The Nashville International Airport was the first airport in the country to allow ride-sharing services to operate on the property. For those wishing to take advantage of ride share services, the Church of God discount code for UBER is GA16UBER.
Kevin Brooks, Coordinator of Public Relations and Conference Management for the Church of God, also serves on the General Assembly cabinet and has been instrumental in negotiating with hotels and local transportation services. One of his favorites is a new and unique mode of transportation for downtown Nashville called Joy Ride, a complimentary downtown golf cart ride which operates by “tips only” for all riders.
“Joy Ride has embraced what downtown Nashville has become: a fun and active place with lots to do and see,” Brooks stated. “Whether on foot, car, bus or golf cart, getting around Nashville is easy and an adventure while getting there.”