Category Archives: jesus

Leadership: Yipes!

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As a birthday present to myself in 2002, I attended a two-day home church seminar put on my Tony and Felicity Dale in Oxnard, California. The meeting was held in an old barn with forty or so people in the place.

I knew no one and also knew very little about the home church movement in America.

During a break, a man introduced himself and we struck up a conversation. The man said something that has stuck with me ever since: “Frank Viola is the most radical leader in the home church movement.”

Now, the man spoke the words as a warning to me, but it had the opposite affect. You see, I like radicals and made up my mind to read as many of Frank Viola’s books as possible. I now enjoy all of Viola’s books and his blog. And what’s more, I even like Viola as a person.

Now, I said all of the above as a way to introduce the best article I have ever seen on New Testament church leadership. And let me tell you, all of Christianity needs to read this and be set free from the myths that keeps us Christians in bondage to our false leadership ideas. You can read the whole article here.

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Filed under Christianity, Church, Faith, Gifts of the Spirit, God, Home Church, jesus, Kingdom of God, Leadership, Prayer, Prophecy, spiritual warfare

Behind the Veil of Tears

My life was forever changed in 2011 when I read No Longer a Slumdog by K. P. Yohannan.

The stories about 9.9 million little girls between the ages of 4 and 11 years of age being homeless and walking the streets of India attempting to survive, the stories about 300 million downtrodden Indian people who are considered untouchable because they were born to the wrong parents, and the stories about the degradation of women in India crushed my heart.

My poor heart has never recovered nor do I ever want it to revert back to before reading Yohannan’s book.

The above video was produced by the Saylor Brothers and the quality is A+++, but it is 17 minutes and 22 seconds long. If you have the time, watch it. You won’t regret doing so.

Just so you know: I wept all the way through it, thinking about the six children my wife and I sponsor through GFA’s Bridge of Hope program and asking the Lord to show me how we can do more.

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Got 99¢

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Beginning today and ending on February 26, my novel Jonah is on sale at Amazon for $.99. You can download it onto your Kindle or any iPad, PC, Mac, iPhone, and all smartphones with Kindle apps.

Amazon Book Description:

The novel, Jonah, consists of two novellas written specifically for people who live in a post-911 America and who no longer see hope in a watered down, same-o same-o religion.

The main character in the first novella, Jeremiah, has his dreams wrecked by a late night visitation with an angel. Then, he receives a prophetic message for San Francisco. Will the city heed Jeremiah’s warning or is the city doomed?

In the second novella, Jonah, two prophets receive identical messages for the West Coast. Though each faces different struggles, it comes down to whether or not the people believe the prophets’ words. If the prophetic words are ignored, what will happen?

Fiction or prophecy? Time will soon reveal the answer to all of us.

Check out the two reader reviews here.

261 Pages           Reg. Price: $3.99     Author & Publisher: Larry Nevenhoven

Available at Amazon for Kindle and Kindle Apps.

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Tuesday’s Prayers for America (2/18/2014)

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Ananias and Sapphira, who sold property and then kept back part of the proceeds in Acts 5:1-11, may have been leaders for the mushrooming Jerusalem Church. The church was approximately four years old and had grown to more than ten thousand members at the time. Could Ananias and Sapphira have been pastors, teachers, or overseers?

The scripture does not really give us concrete answers for Ananias and Sapphira, but allow me to make a few points:

1. Barnabas was mentioned two verses earlier as giving proceeds from a sale of land to the apostles. He was a teacher, and then later, an apostle.

2. The Bible was not written in chapter and verse format, but rather in regular prose. The Ananias and Sapphira example was written to contrast with the Barnabas example. The word “but” indicates a contrast.

3. James mentioned that teachers are judged according to tougher standards than ordinary believers. James would have been there when the Ananias and Sapphira incident happened.

4. Paul stated that elders should be rebuked openly so that all people will fear God.

5. The qualifications for overseer included being above reproach, not greedy, and able to manage his household well.

6. The Apostle Peter dealt with both Ananias and Sapphira. The scene did not take place at the Temple, but in a home where most likely a house church assembled. Maybe Peter met with believers like Ananias and Sapphira to help them in their callings. Paul did this at Ephesus.

At the least, Ananias and Sapphira were well-known by believers so that when they died for lying to the Holy Spirit, great fear fell upon the whole church.

My prayer for America today:

“Lord, raise up leaders in America who will be our fathers in Christ because they actually imitate Christ. “(Based on 1 Corinthians 4:15-16)

What do you think and has the Lord spoken to you?

Join with me on Tuesdays to fast and pray for America. 

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Friday’s Prayers for Prisoners (2/14/2014)

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Two years ago, I felt the Lord speak to my heart: “If I asked you to exchange places with a prisoner in a North Korean prison, would you do it?”

I then had a vision of a prisoner  huddling in the corner of a dark cell. The prisoner’s eyes mirrored the fear and hopelessness of his situation. His haggard face and skinny arms revealed the dangerous malnutrition he suffered. The ragged clothing he wore offered little protection from the frigid temperatures of the North Korean winter.

The vision seemed so real, that it felt like if I answered “yes,” the exchange would happen immediately. My wife, my family, and my friends would never know what happened to me. I would be gone. All of my writing and everything I ever hoped to accomplish would be left behind.

To be honest, the Lord’s question stirred up mountains of fear within me. I really did not want to exchange places with the prisoner. Yet, how could I say “no” to the One who took my place on the cross almost two thousand years ago and saved me from suicide just twenty-nine years ago.

“Lord, it’s not my will to exchange places with a prisoner, but Your will be done in my life,” I finally prayed.

Obviously, the exchange did not take place that day, but that vision and that prayer set me free from whatever might hold me back from recklessly following the Lord wherever He leads me in the future.

So today I prayed:

Lord, help us Americans who wish to be Your disciples, to deny ourselves, pick up our crosses daily, and then follow You. (Based on Luke 9:23)

What do you think and has the Lord spoken to you?

Join with me on Fridays to fast and pray for prisoners, according to Hebrews 13:3

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Tuesday’s Prayers for America (2/11/2014)

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For the 12th consecutive year, North Korea is where Christian persecution is the most extreme. It is estimated 100,000 believers worship the Lord secretly out of a total population of 25 million people. If government authorities catch believers praying, saying the name of Jesus, owning a Bible, or assembling together, they are immediately subject to being executed or thrown into concentration camps.

Right now, 50-70,000 Christians are imprisoned in North Korean concentration camps. These believers are raped, beaten, murdered, starved, and used as slave labor in these horrendous places. The prisoners survive on rice husks, grass, tree bark, bugs, rats, mice, or whatever they can find to eat. Thousands starve and freeze to death each year.

Let’s put on our thinking caps for a moment.

How many types of divisions do you think there are in the Body of Christ in North Korea? Is there a Pentecostal/Charismatic division for those who practice the gifts? Is there a baptism division for those who dunk new believers rather than use sprinkling? Or a King James Bible division? Or a woman pastor/leader division? Or whatever?

No, of course not. You see, there are no divisions in the midst of such extreme cruelty against fellow Christians. The only division is between believers and unbelievers. Period.

Okay, what does this mean for us American believers?

that they [believers] all may be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me.” (John 17:21)

I guarantee the above prayer by Jesus will be fulfilled so that we believers here in America will be unified and without division. We aren’t there yet, but we will be sometime in the future.

Now, will it take extreme persecution for us American believers to finally be unified? Or can we voluntarily lay our divisions down ahead of time? It will be one or the other.

So, here’s my prayer for America today:

Lord, I pray that we American believers learn how to walk in a manner worthy of You, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. (Based on Ephesians 4:2-3)

What do you think and has the Lord spoken to you?

Join with me on Tuesdays to fast and pray for America. 

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Lord, Help me Love Democrats (Part 3)

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The landmark Roe vs. Wade decision by the Supreme Court on January 22, 1973, blindsided Christianity. Confused Christians jumped into foxholes and hid from the wicked aftermath of the decision.

Rev. Jerry Falwell, the pastor of the largest independent Baptist church in America and the founder of Liberty University, realized Roe vs. Wade undermined the moral fabric of America. He had long held the belief that politics and Christianity should not be mixed and had often stated, “Preachers are not called to be politicians, but soul winners.”

But two things eventually changed his mind.

First, Falwell was influenced by the writings of Francis Schaeffer, who blamed society’s downfall on secular humanism. Schaeffer urged Christians, especially pastors, to become political activists, stating, “Christians had a moral duty to step into political arenas to change nations…”

Second, Falwell studied the success of the Civil Rights movement. He noted how America was forever changed because King and the other leaders forced governments to grant equal rights to all Americans, not just whites.

So, in 1976, Rev. Falwell held “I Love America” rallies across America. Large crowds gathered to hear him preach against the Equal Rights Amendment, abortion, homosexuality, pornography, the family breakdown, and communism.

These rallies catapulted Falwell into the forefront of the Christian political movement.

In 1979, conservative leaders and Republican operatives convinced Rev. Falwell to co-found, along with Paul Weyrich, the Moral Majority. Weyrich was the founder of the Heritage Foundation and also coined the term −moral majority. It was Weyrich’s knowledge of grassroots politics which helped set up Moral Majority chapters in states, especially the South.

Rev. Falwell barnstormed America during the 1980 presidential campaign giving speeches, holding seminars, and preaching sermons in every major city. President Ronald Reagan won the election and became America’s 40th president. Many credited Moral Majority and Falwell’s preaching for the victory.

The popularity of Moral Majority lessened in the late 1980’s and was disbanded in 1989.

Now, I believe Rev. Jerry Falwell was a good man who had good intentions, but I believe America is still burdened by his and other leaders’  decisions during the 1970’s. We will look at what I consider were their mistakes in future articles.

(Continued in Part 4)

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Announcing: “The Hunt for Larry Who”

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To think that I would ever write a memoir would have been preposterous a few years ago. After all, I don’t rub shoulders with the famous and have done little of value in my life. If I died today, my eulogy would simply be: “Larry loved God.” Who knows? Maybe that’s enough.

Amazon Book Description:

Although the author’s surname is Nevenhoven, few can pronounce it. So what do they do? They wrinkle their noses and say, “Larry who?”

The actual hunt for Larry Who began on a farm in the 1950’s surrounded by loving parents and country churches. It continued down a winding path through the 1960’s and the University of Illinois, ending up with Larry being an agnostic.  Then, it was off to Detroit, Louisville, and Fort Dodge, Iowa, where Jesus blasted Larry’s agnosticism to pieces on the day of his planned suicide.

From his salvation day onward, life should have been one triumph after another, but that was not the case. He trudged through deep valleys of loneliness, poverty, rejection, firings from jobs, climbing into dumpsters, homelessness, divorce, and failures.

But it was during Larry’s worst disappointments and deepest valleys when the Lord revealed Himself as a loving Father with unlimited grace to soothe the pain in His child.

“The Hunt for Larry Who” is a series of snapshot experiences about a farm boy from small-town America who desired to be wealthy, as in stinking rich, but ended up falling in love with Jesus. Paul the Apostle described Larry to a tee:

“This is a trustworthy saying, and everyone should accept it: “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners”—and I am the worst of them all. But God had mercy on me so that Christ Jesus could use me as a prime example of his great patience with even the worst sinners. Then others will realize that they, too, can believe in him and receive eternal life (1 Timothy 1:15-16 New Living Translation).”

If you are looking to read another vanilla flavored story about a Christian that does everything right,  “The Hunt for Larry Who” is not that book. It is a down in the trenches account of an ordinary man who struggles to serve an extraordinary God.

300 pages          $3.99          Author & Publisher: Larry Nevenhoven

Available on Amazon for Kindle and Kindle Apps

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Friday’s Prayers for Prisoners (2/7/2014)

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Jesus sat in His home in Capernaum, teaching a crowd of people. Four men carried a paralytic on a stretcher to His home, but they could not move through the throng. They carried the paralytic up the stairs to the roof and proceeded to rip apart the roof tiles. Then, they lowered the stretcher, with the paralytic on it, down through the hole in the roof to the floor below.

Because of the noise and the falling debris from the roof tiles, every eye focused on the paralytic as he was lowered down in front of Jesus. The Lord recognized the men’s faith and said, “Son, your sins are forgiven.”

The scribes and Pharisees got all bent out of shape because Jesus forgave the paralytic’s sins, but then Jesus said something amazing:

“Which is easier to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven you,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk?'” (Luke 5:23)

Most of us probably believe that it’s easier to be forgiven by God than to be healed by Him, but Jesus did not answer like that. He forgave and healed the paralytic.

Because of this story in Matthew 9, Mark 2, and Luke 5, I am convinced that if we have enough faith to believe the Father will forgive our sins then we have enough faith to believe God will heal us or others when we pray for them.

Okay, if this is true, then why aren’t more people being healed in America? And why are people being healed in Third World nations?

Sadly, we Americans have so complicated the gospel with teachings, books, seminars, and religious rigamorole that we can no longer see the simplicity of Jesus’ message. But the people in Third World countries are not burdened by all of this and simply believe His Word.

We need to change!

Today, I prayed for us American believers:

“Lord, open the blind eyes of us Americans to bring us out of our prisons of unbelief.” (Based on Isaiah 42:7)

What do you think and has the Lord spoken to you?

Join with me on Fridays to fast and pray for prisoners, according to Hebrews 13:3

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Lord, Help me Love Democrats (Part 2)

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In the late 1940’s, Ja-shil Choi had her spiritual eyes opened by the Lord to the ungodly direction South Korea was heading. Her heart was broken by the nation’s sin and knew something had to be done.

At the time, 3% of South Koreans were Christians. These believers were poor and powerless, mainly because of Japan’s occupation of South Korea from 1910 until the end of WWII. Japan banned Christianity during the occupation. Those  believers who ignored the ban and were caught by the Japanese were thrown into prison or executed.

Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. (James 1:2-3) 

The “prayer mountain movement” began during Japan’s occupation. Believers climbed up mountains during the late night hours and prayed until sunrise. They then climbed down to put in a full day’s work before returning again that night.

Ja-shil Choi followed the examples of the “prayer mountain movement” believers and began fasting and praying for her nation, even though she was finishing up Bible school and had three children. She often prayed through the night for ten hours or so. She continued this routine for almost ten years before she met David Yonggi Cho.

The two then began a church in Ja-Shil Choi’s house. The two fasted and prayed 5 to 6 hours per day in what they referred to as a prayer tent.

Their first church eventually grew to one thousand members. David Yonggi Cho then started a second church, which grew to ten thousand members. Along the way, David Yonggi Cho married Ja-shil Choi’s daughter.

A third church, Yoido Full Gospel Church, was built in 1973. Today, Yoido has over 800,000 members with weekly prayer meetings numbering in the hundreds of thousands. A Christian retreat, Prayer Mountain, has facilities for 10,000 believers to spend time in secluded prayer and fasting.

South Korea is now home to six of the world’s largest churches, ranging in size from 47,000 to 800,000. Christianity has grown to 30% and South Korea’s economy is one of the strongest in the world.

How much of this came about because of Ja-Shil Choi’s faithfulness?

We won’t know for sure until we arrive in heaven, but my guess would be: a large percentage of it.

(Continued in Part 3) 

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