Category Archives: Faith

My Faith for MyGFA Campaign

Click on to see MyGFA site.

Click on to see MyGFA site.

I have to admit that when the Lord gave me the idea to start a MyGFA campaign to support one hundred unsponsored Bridge of Hope Children, He dropped an enormous blob of faith on me. The blob of faith was so big that I thought, “This will be so easy. Just a piece of cake for God and me to handle.”

Now, one of the things about God’s enormous blobs of faith is that their effects only last until God has us where He wants us to be. Then, our blobs of faith evaporate and we are forced to operate out of our inner faith.

Yikes, right? What do we do then?

This is how I handle it:

I remind the Lord everyday that this was His idea, not mine. And because it’s His idea, it’s His responsibility to bring the money in. It’s His reputation that’s on the line because, Lord knows, my reputation stinks. If He doesn’t move on behalf of these one hundred unsponsored kids, I will fail. So, Lord, my trust is in You. What do You want me to do next?

Corrie ten Boom said, “It’s not that I have great faith, but rather, it’s that I have a little faith in a great God.”

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How Big is our God?

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The following is a true story about a MyGFA campaign and a dad who involved his children in the campaign decision:

Dad: “For Christmas this year what do you think about our family helping raise support for a Jesus Well?”

Kids: “YEAH!!! That sounds great!”

Dad: “How many wells should we raise support for?” (Dad quietly thinking possibly five wells, because anything is possible with God!)

Kids: “How much does a Jesus Well cost?”

Dad: “One thousand four hundred dollars.”

Kids: “Ok. Let’s raise support for one thousand four hundred Jesus Wells.”

Dad: Humbled. “Do you know how much money that would take? We would need to involve everyone we know and then they would have to involve everyone they know and on and on and on…”

Kids: “Daddy, How big is our God?”

Dad: “One thousand four hundred Jesus Wells sounds like the perfect God inspired number. Now let’s get ready to watch God move!”

This is your invitation to become a part of the story to personally see how God can use anyone with a willing heart to accomplish His will. (You can read the rest of the campaign article here.)

To date, the family has raised $2867, which means they still need $1,957,133 to meet their campaign goal. Why not help them out? You can do that by clicking here.

After all, how big is our God?

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8 Exchanges at the Cross

 

My Aussie friend, Roger Williams, at Reality Revelations had the above video on his blog site. The video is 5 minutes long and well worth viewing, but what caught my attention was when Derek Prince spoke about the 8 exchanges which happened at the cross.

Prince said:

The cross is the center of the whole Christian faith. All the evil that was due us was thrust on Jesus. All the good that was due Jesus was made available to us. At the cross, 8 exchanges took place.

1. Jesus was punished that we might be forgiven.

2. Jesus was wounded that we might be healed.

3. Jesus was made sin with our sinfulness that we might be righteous with His righteousness.

4. Jesus died our death that we might receive His life.

5. Jesus endured our poverty that we might endure His abundance.

6. Jesus bore our shame that we might share His glory.

7. Jesus endured our rejection that we might have His acceptance with God the Father.

8. Jesus was made a curse that we might receive the blessing.

(This is a rerun from May 28, 2013)

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Learning How to Pray Effectively in 59 Seconds or Less (Part 17)

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I recently had coffee with a friend at Starbucks. “You will never guess what the leader of our Bible study asked me last night?” he said.

I shook my head.

“The leader asked, ‘On a scale of one to ten, how would you rate your faith level?’ I answered her by saying that mine was probably a zero or a one.”

“What did she say to that?” I asked.

“She wasn’t impressed and said that her faith level was at least an eight or a nine. Another person stated that his faith level was a perfect ten. Larry, what would you have replied to them?”

I laughed and said, “I probably would have jumped up and said, ‘Let’s go to a hospital or a funeral home right now. Such great faith needs to be used for healing the sick and raising the dead. Let’s not waste any time!'”

We both laughed.

“He must increase, but I must decrease.” (John 3:30)

At our salvation, we each received our own lumps of faith. What we do with our lumps is up to each of us. We can increase our faith through studying God’s word, prayer, hearing the voice of God, our experiences, fasting, and so forth. Yet, there will eventually be certain situations where we realize that our faith is not enough.

looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith… (Hebrews 12:2)

Then, our faith must be in the Lord, His power, and His wisdom to do what’s best for that situation. If the Lord heals, if He provides, or if He shows up with a miracle, praise the Lord. If He doesn’t, praise Him anyway.

“Sometimes God allows in His wisdom what He could easily prevent by His power.” (Graham Cooke)

How can we boast in our weakness like the Apostle Paul did?

(Continued in Part 18…earlier parts can be read by clicking here.)

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My Sales Career: If Only… (Part 1)

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(click on above) 

I spent many years selling pharmaceuticals, construction equipment, health and beauty aids, stocks and bonds, cars, real estate, advertising, and whatever. There were great days in my sales career and a few horrendous ones. My sales philosophy agreed with Sophie Tucker who said, “I have been rich and I have been poor − and believe me, rich is better.”

But throughout my whole sales career, one nagging thought bothered me over and over again: “If only I totally believed in my product. If only…”

No doubt, there are wonderful companies selling great products here in America. I do not mean to belittle any of them because my nagging problem was mine and mine alone. It had nothing to do with the business world.

You see, I wanted to sell a hybrid Cadillac-Mercedes-Rolls Royce-DeBeers-Tiffany product with Toyota/Honda backed service for $99 or three easy payments of $33 or even twelve payments of $8.25.

Now you understand my dilemma of unreal expectations in a real world.

Then, I met a man named Jesus who smashed to smithereens all of my business and sales concepts. He taught me to depend on His abilities and not mine. His products and services are much, much better than my expectations ever were in the past.

Okay, you can check on my sales goal of $42,000 to cover the cost of 100 Bridge of Hope unsponsored children here. My business/sales plan is to fast and pray and then follow the Lord’s leading. As far as a backup plan, I have none.

Just so you know: the anonymous $100 came from Carol and me.

Thus, the program begins today for me.

I will post updates from time to time.

(Continued in Part 2)

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Learning How to Pray Effectively in 59 Seconds or Less (Part 5)

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We all received beginners’ lumps of faith for our lives at salvation. The lumps we received were uniquely ours, especially assigned to us by God. Like the muscles on newborn babies, our beginners’ lumps of faith were undeveloped and lacked strength.

A car salesman friend told about being a new Christian and going on a honeymoon trip with his young bride. One morning, he and his wife walked outside their motel and noticed the car’s rear tire was flat. He had recently listened to some faith teachings so he figured this was the perfect moment to practice what he had learned.

“In Jesus’ name, I command that tire to air up. Judy, let’s go to town,” he said.

His wife looked at him. “What?”

“Yes, sweetheart, we walk by faith and not by sight.”

She climbed into the car and the couple took off for the nearby town, but before long, the couple stopped and changed the tire.

“Larry,” said my friend, “remember to walk by faith but keep a car jack handy, just in case.”

We both laughed at his experience.

A couple of years later, I heard an evangelist relate a story about four seventy-year old women from his church.

“The four gals took off for Mexico to preach the gospel on street corners. Their car was old and not in very good shape, but they were not worried in the least because God told them to go.”

He laughed and then continued. “Just on the other side of the border, they heard a bang. They stopped and one sister jumped out. A tire was flat. She said, ‘In Jesus’ name, I command the tire to be healed.’ She jumped back in the car. They drove off down the road and had no more problems.”

The earth produces by itself, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear. (Mark 4:28)

Our faith is like a seed of corn planted in the earth. It needs light and water to grow, but it still has to go through various seasons before it produces fruit.

So, don’t give up if you are in an early season of faith growth. Just keep on praying and believing. Maybe one day soon that tire will air up for you, too.

(Continued in Part 6)

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Learn How to Pray Effectively in 59 Seconds or Less (Part 4)

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One of my favorite preachers was R. W. Schambach who always closed his radio programs by saying, “You don’t have any troubles! All you need is faith in God.” Schambach held crusades and preached the gospel in over 200 nations before his death in 2012. On one radio program, he told about a crusade his ministry held in India before 50,000 people.

“I was preaching up a storm,” said Rev. Schambach, “when a blind man interrupted me by walking out onto the platform and asking for prayer so that his eyes would be healed. He didn’t even want to wait until the end of my message.

“I turned the man toward the crowd and said, ‘I’m going to pray for this blind man in the name of Allah.’ Do you know what the crowd did? They laughed.

“I next said, ‘I’m going to pray for this man in the name of Buddha.’ The crowd laughed again.

“I then said, ‘I’m going to pray for this man in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth.’ The crowd kept quiet as every eye watched us.

“After I prayed for the blind man and the Lord healed his eyes, 50,000 people came forward for salvation and healing prayers.”

And without faith it is impossible to please Him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that He exists and that He rewards those who seek Him. (Hebrews 11:6)

Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindus all believe their gods exist. That’s the supposed reason the people follow them.

But our God is the only God that rewards those who diligently seek Him.

So, if we want effective prayers, we need to pray in faith and believe that God is going to reward our prayer efforts by answering our prayers. Otherwise, why pray them?

(Continued in Part 5)

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Learn How to Pray Effectively in 59 Seconds or Less (Part 2)

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Captain Edward Smith hurried along the deck to the RMS Titanic’s bridge. His face revealed the anguish he felt on that cold night in 1912.

“Captain, Captain,” shouted a passenger rushing toward him.

“Yes,” said the Captain.

“How does it look?”

“It’s time for us to pray.”

“Oh Lord!” proclaimed the passenger. “Has it come down to that?”

This is a fictional adaptation of a stressful moment in history, but I think it reflects how most of us regard prayer: a last resort option when every other alternative has been crossed off our lists.

Let’s say, the average Christian goes to his physician for a checkup. The doctor runs a few tests and discovers the believer has an inoperable, rapid-growing cancer. “Sorry, you have less than three months to live. You had better get your affairs in order,” he says.

Even though Jesus still answers prayers. Even though Jesus is still the Living Word. Even though Jesus is still the Healer. The odds are about 99 to 1 the believer will soon die.

Why?

The average believer will develop everything in his journey with the Lord, except prayer. He will know all the words to the latest Hillsong worship song. He will read all of the top Christian books. He will post the catchiest sayings on Facebook. He will attend a good church where he faithfully gives offerings. He will support his pastor and sit in the amen corner. He will add his name to prayer chains and will be prayed for by anyone who might have a gift of healing.

Yet, the odds will still be 99 to 1 that he will soon die.

To pray effectively, we must move prayer to the top of our daily lists and not use it as a last resort when all else fails.

(P.S Just so everyone knows: I am not against doctors or medical aid.)

(Continued in Part 3)

 

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Learn How to Pray Effectively in 59 Seconds or Less (Part 1)

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Forgive me. The title is a little misleading, but maybe we can work past this and my other flaws in the weeks ahead. Just give me a try, okay?

On May 20, 1985, I gave my life to Jesus on a bathroom floor. My eighteen years of being a devout agnostic were cleansed by the blood of Jesus. I then became a new creation.

The following morning, I arose early and walked into the family room. There I sat down on the sofa. It seemed like I needed to pray, but how? I wasn’t sure.

I prayed something like this: “Lord, bless my wife. Bless my son. Bless my daughter…” And so forth for my family and friends.

Were my prayers effective? Yes, I am sure they were. You see, our Lord meets us where we are in our Christian journeys and encourages us to grow from there.

This reminds me of a great fictional story.

A bishop was on a long cruise, but he discovered the ship was sailing past a small island where two illiterate believers lived. Numerous sailors had reported about the miracles, signs, and wonders performed by the men. The bishop convinced the captain to anchor the ship for a few hours at the island.

The bishop went ashore and met the two men. All shook hands and introduced themselves.

“Can you show me how you pray?” asked the bishop.

“Oh,” said one man, “we just pray, ‘Bless him, Jesus’ and miracles then happen.”

The bishop shook his head. “You need teaching. Your prayers are limited and much too shallow.”

The bishop spent the next three hours teaching the two men the fundamentals of prayer according to proper evangelical standards. As soon as he finished, he sailed away on the ship.

Later that night, the bishop stood on deck gazing at the moon and its reflections upon the sea. Then he heard, “Hey, bishop. Hey, bishop.”

He looked to the right and saw the two illiterate men running alongside the ship on the water. “Bishop, can you tell us again what comes after ‘Our Father which art in heaven?'” yelled one of the men.

Those of you who are not seeing miracles, signs, wonders, breakthroughs and also not running on water as yet, stop by again.

(Continued in Part 2)

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29 Years Ago…

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I started a farm publishing company in Louisville, Kentucky, but from its shoestring beginning, it always needed more money. Hot Line, Inc. purchased the company in 1981. My wife, our two children, and I moved to Fort Dodge, Iowa, in the spring of 1982, purchasing a brick home on Sixth Avenue North. There I managed the new Farm Blue Division for Hot Line.

After a year with Hot Line, I left and started a new publication, still chasing my dreams of being wealthy, as in stinking rich. But it all came crashing down in 1985 because I needed thousands of dollars to start a new publishing company and bail my family out of debt. Our financial resources were maxed out. My inner reservoir was empty and I was finished.

Our only untouched asset was a $125,000 life insurance policy on me. The solution seemed obvious: suicide.

Suicide posed no moral obstacles for me because I was an agnostic. No God equaled zero problems with eternal judgment after carrying out a final business decision. My plan was to enjoy the family for the weekend and commit suicide on the following Monday.

May 20, 1985, arrived with me figuring this was the end of the line. I was not jittery about the decision, but instead I finished up a few loose ends in the morning. I ate leftovers for lunch along with drinking cups of coffee. Later that afternoon, I drove downtown to visit an insurance agent.

Bill Sheridan and I knew each other, but we were not intimate friends. His son played on a youth baseball team, which I had coached the year before. Our relationship was built on after-game conversations, standing in parking lots next to baseball diamonds. He was not even my life insurance agent.

Why did I stop to see him that day? I do not really know for sure, but I think a business partner of mine, suggested I should see him for some reason.

Bill invited me into his office. He sat in a chair behind his desk while I sat in a chair opposite him. We discussed sports and the prospects for our son’s upcoming baseball seasons. In the middle of our conversation, he stared at me.

“You’re thinking about committing suicide, aren’t you?” he said, his eyes zeroing in on mine.

His words hit like a sledgehammer. How did he know? I told no one. It was my secret $125,000 payday for my family. Words fluttered around my brain, but failed to connect with my tongue. As I sat there, a vision played across my mind showing my old Chevy Vega ramming into a viaduct and killing me. I wept, and although attempting to regain composure, I could not.

“How did you know?” I asked through sobs.

“Oh, the Lord told me while we were talking to each other.”

His words shattered my unbelief because I realized that God was alive and cared about me. We continued talking and he gave me a book: Power in Praise by Merlin Carothers. Bill eventually shook my hand and said one more explosive comment before I left.

“I speak in tongues,” he said.

Walking to my car, I thought, this God-stuff is real. It’s not hocus-pocus tomfoolery after all. I wept all the way home.

I walked into our empty house and sat down on the loveseat in the living room, facing the fireplace. I began reading Power in Praise. Each page seemed to have been written with me in mind. After twenty-five pages, I put the book down on the coffee table and walked into the downstairs bathroom. I locked the door behind me. There I knelt on the floor in front of the bathroom sink, using it as an altar for my hands. My reflection in the mirror revealed a desperate man.

“Jesus, I’ve tried everything else and nothing has worked. I guess I’ll give You a try.”

Instantly, I knew Jesus was alive and now lived inside of me. I wept for joy, knowing He loved me. I worshipped Him and prayed verbatim Footprints in the Sand as a personal prayer, but I added a new twist for its ending.

“Lord, I’m never climbing out of Your arms because You’re always going to have to carry me. I’m too weak.”

(The above excerpt is from my memoir, The Hunt for Larry Who, Amazon eBook,  © 2014 by Larry Nevenhoven)

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