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Believe Your Prayers Have Power

Believe Your Prayers Have Power

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Feb 18, 2021

During this 40 Days of Apostleship, we are looking at how to expand our faith from the faith of a disciple to the faith of an apostle.  That means up-leveling your faith from believing in Jesus to believing like Jesus. My theory is those who believe like Jesus can do the kinds of things Jesus did.

Last week we looked at Jesus’ belief in divine partnership.  This week, we explore a second of his beliefs:  that his prayers had power.

Jesus’ Belief: Prayer Has Power

I have to believe that Jesus believed that his prayers had power.  Consider the chutzpah it took for him to call forth a very dead Lazarus from the tomb.  Yet, Jesus preceded this bold act with a prayer: “Father, I thank you that you have heard me.  I know that you always hear me.” (John 11:41-42a) Only after he prayed did Jesus cry out, “Lazarus! Come out!”

Not only did Jesus believe that his prayers had power, he absolutely believed that your prayers have power, too.  Listen to this audacious advice from Jesus found in Mark 11:24 and elsewhere, “Whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.”

Whatever?!  Yep, that’s what the scriptures say.

“I tell you the truth,” Jesus says elsewhere in the Gospels, “if you have faith and do not doubt, not only can you do what was done to the fig tree, but also you can say to this mountain, ‘Go throw yourself into the sea,’ and it will be done.  If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.” (Matthew 21:21-22).

Did you catch that?  When you believe like Jesus, you can ask for whatever you want in prayer.  No matter how outrageous.  All it takes is faith and belief.  But when doubt enters in, it can derail you.  Somehow, you need to suspend disbelief and refocus on faith.

Soul Work: Allow Your Prayers to be Answered

Let me tell you how I visualize prayer working.  I envision a constant conveyor belt of blessing and abundance that flows from God to us.  You ask, God answers.  In fact, the moment you ask for something, the answer to your prayer gets plopped on the divine conveyor belt and begins to make its way to you.

But what if, along the way, you second-guess your request or worry about your ability to handle the blessing? Let’s say you’re not sure you can integrate the new reality the answered prayer would bring.  Then what?

These doubts—if felt strong enough and long enough—can slow down, stop or even reverse the conveyor belt of blessing.  In other words, you can unintentionally work against your own prayers.

In order to allow your prayers to be answered, you have to weed out doubt.  Begin to notice and name the doubts that may accompany your prayers.  As you name them, send them on a different conveyor belt back to God.  Then ask God to strengthen your faith and increase your belief as you refocus on joyfully receiving whatever you have asked for in prayer.

Embrace the Belief:  Start Small

Several years ago, I began to experiment with believing like Jesus. When it came to the belief that my prayers had power, I decided to ask God for something small and inconsequential that wouldn’t trip the wires of self-doubt.

I asked God to have someone gift me with a mug.  Then, I practiced believing that I had received the mug by visualizing the act of opening my hands and seeing a mug placed in them.  I rehearsed the feeling of happiness that would accompany it.  I did that for about a week, then I forgot about it.

One afternoon, three or four weeks later, the doorbell rang.  I opened the front door and saw a man I didn’t recognize.

“Can I help you?” I asked.

“I’m Willie,” he answered. “This mug is for you,” he said handing over a slightly misshapen blue ceramic coffee mug. “Well, for your husband actually. I made it for him after the last construction job we finished.  It’s been sitting on the floor of my pick-up truck for months.  I just never got around to stopping by. ‘Til today.”

I could hardly believe it. “Why, thank you,” I beamed, holding the mug in my hand. “You wouldn’t believe it, but this is just what I’ve been praying for.”

Apostolic Action: Build Your Faith

Now a coffee mug isn’t that big a deal.  But believing like Jesus is.  Master the art of believing without doubt and you can have a greater impact than you could ever imagine.

As you move from discipleship to apostleship, no doubt you will want to make a bigger ask of God than a mere mug.  There are rights to wrong, loaves and fishes to multiply, and wounds to bind up.  Considering the impact our prayers can have on the world today, believing that our prayers have power is critical to creating the just and compassionate society for which we long.  Combining our prayers with action like Jesus did with Lazarus, can bring about results nothing short of miraculous.

So start small.  Build your faith in your ability to ask and receive. Then visualize the conveyor belt delivering all kinds of answered prayers, and the delight you’ll feel when the doorbell rings.

 

Adapted from forthcoming book, Believe Like Jesus, © copyright 2021 Rebekah Simon-Peter

Forty Days of Apostleship:  Believe in Your Divine Partnership

Forty Days of Apostleship: Believe in Your Divine Partnership

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Feb 18, 2021

As the United States struggles to get a handle on the deadly pandemic that has left so many families missing loved ones and tries to move forward after the vicious and deadly attack on our capital by white supremacists and conspiracy theorists, we can be left feeling powerless.

Sometimes it looks like there is nothing we can do to right the many injustices of systemic racism, poverty, food inequity, and homelessness.  There are those who would have you believe this. However, nothing could be further from the truth.

As a Christian you come from a long line of miracle-workers, healers of the sick, and banishers of demons.  Your people proclaimed the Gospel of the Kin(g)dom of God since Jesus first walked the earth. So put away the notion that you have no say in how things go.  You are a spiritual badass in the making!

After all, Jesus lived under tough times, too.  One of his primary beliefs, however, lifted him above the fray and activated his agency so that he dared to make a difference. As you learn to believe like Jesus, this belief will activate your agency as well.

The Forty Days of Apostleship is designed to guide you to step into your spiritual power by emboldening you to expand your beliefs from simply believing in Jesus, to believing like Jesus. This vital shift undergirds your evolution from practicing the faith of a disciple to developing and living the faith of an apostle. This faith expansion gives you access to new perspectives, which in turn gives you access to new actions.

Jesus’ Belief: Divine Partnership

Jesus believed that he operated in divine partnership with God.  In fact, Jesus believed that he was one with God: “I and the Father are one.” (John 10:30) To those who doubted him, Jesus went on to say that this unity should be apparent through his many good works. I’m paraphrasing his words here, but he basically said—”Look, even if you don’t believe my words, believe the works you’ve seen me do.  Then you’ll know and understand that the Father is in me and I am in the Father.” (John 10:38)

Jesus’ belief in divine partnership is manifested through both his words and his works.  So, to begin to believe like Jesus, you’ll need to re-consider both your words and your works.

Soul Work

Here is the two-part process to take this soulful step of belief.

Words:  First, personalize and put yourself into the scripture: “I and the Father are one.” For instance, “I, Rebekah, and the Father are one.”  Meditate on, repeat, and reflect on the truth of these words.  As you do, draw your awareness from your head to your heart. Your head—headquarters of fear and self-doubt—will probably want to talk you out of this.  If so, turn to your heart—your local hub for God-consciousness and divine connection. Notice how your heart responds as you repeat these words.

Works:  Second, consider the good works that you have already done. Include who you have prayed for, cared for, blessed, and contributed to.  Include the projects you have undertaken, the leadership you have offered, and the behind-the-scenes know-how you have given.  Make a list of these good works.  Then, celebrate them. I mean really celebrate them!  Not for ego fulfillment but as a way of acknowledging your very real partnership with God. Doing these good works could not have happened without a holy alliance between you and God!

Embrace the Belief

As you re-frame both your words and your works, there is one more step to begin to believe like Jesus: fully embrace this Jesus-belief in divine partnership.  For help with this, let’s turn to ancient wisdom.

The ancients have always understood that to be human is to house the divine within through the soul.  More recent spiritual teachers have gently corrected this understanding: “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience, but spiritual beings having a human experience.”  Whether the soul houses the body, or the body houses the soul, your soul is the spiritual counterpart to your physical being.  Together, body and soul are the complete you.

But unity with God is bigger than what happens within your body or your soul—as if either could be disconnected from a larger whole. As I note in Dream Like Jesus, “…if God is everywhere present, not a discrete being in the sky, but the quality of Being itself, that means that each of you is inside of God, and God is inside of each of you. You are surrounded by, and suffused with, Divine Power…Consider the vine and branches imagery in John 14:20. ‘I am in God and God is in me and you are in us. I am in you and you are in me,’ Jesus says.”

Apostolic Action

Jesus taught the apostles of old how to do the things he did, and how to tap into the zone of the miraculous to do so.  The apostles cast out demons, healed the sick, and proclaimed the Kin(g)dom. Clearly, they had to believe as he did in order to accomplish these things.

Beliefs shape your thoughts, thoughts are the vessels of your actions, and actions demonstrate your beliefs.  So, as you begin to believe like Jesus, you will find that you are now able to take new kinds of actions and, with recent years bringing serious systemic injustices to light, there are plenty of action opportunities.

As you grow in your belief in your partnership with the Divine, pay attention to new actions the Spirit is prompting you to try.  Again, preference the encouragements of your heart over the cautions of your head.  For instance, what evil or injustice would you address?  What kindness or healing would you offer?  What words of love or acts of hospitality would you risk?  Join me for my free webinar, “How to Create a Culture of Renewal”, to help break down the barriers to achieving renewal and move on to your next step in working in partnership with the Divine.

Dare to put your emerging belief of divine partnership into action as we journey together during this Forty Days of Apostleship. Be sure to let me know how it goes!

 

Adapted from forthcoming book, Believe Like Jesus © copyright 2020 Rebekah Simon-Peter

Forty Days of Apostleship:  Six Soulful Steps to Believe Like Jesus

Forty Days of Apostleship: Six Soulful Steps to Believe Like Jesus

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Feb 15, 2021

Do you believe like Jesus?

As Jesus journeyed to the cross and beyond, he had to be sure of one thing. Everything—his life, his ministry, his sacrifices—rested on this one thing. Jesus had to be sure that his twelve disciples were ready to step up their spiritual game.

To live into their true calling as apostles – first students of the Gospel, and now agents of the Gospel—The Twelve would need to make a fundamental shift. They would need to move from believing in Jesus to believing like Jesus. Otherwise, they could not bring Jesus’ Kingdom dream into reality. And the message would die when Jesus did.

So, what is it that Jesus believed? And is it even possible for mere humans to believe these things as well?  Believing like Jesus is not only possible, it is essential in today’s world.

With the horrific events of January 6th, the attack on our nation’s capital and against our very democracy permanently etched into our memories, with our nation still crippled by a global pandemic, with a culture of systemic racism continuing to take the lives of our black and brown brothers and sisters, and with climate change rapidly affecting our planet and its people, the time is now to truly believe like Jesus.

Six Soulful Steps to Believe Like Jesus

Shift Your Consciousness 

Over the next forty days, I will reveal to you what Jesus believed and how you too can shift your consciousness to embrace these beliefs. Each week, I’ll blog about one of the six soulful steps you can take to believe like Jesus.

Even more exciting, over the next forty days, we’ll also explore what your world would look like if you operated in higher consciousness with Jesus. This will be a real journey of soulful transformation.

To prepare yourself for this jour­­ney of a lifetime, consider six dynamic beliefs of Jesus.

What Jesus Believed

  1. Partnership: Jesus believed he was one with God. Through this partnership, he co-created miracles with God. ­­
  2. Prayer: Jesus believed his prayers had power. He spoke of God, hearing and answering his prayers, and how his prayers had a positive effect on others.
  3. Superpower: Jesus believed he had superpowers. His greatest superpower was working with ordinary people, places, and things to bring about brand new realities.
  4. Purpose: Jesus believed his life had a purpose. He allowed this purpose to guide his daily living and decision-making.
  5. Potential: Jesus believed in people’s potential and held himself accountable for the fulfillment of their potential.
  6. Possibility: Jesus believed in possibility. He trusted in faith more than he trusted his fears.

Now that you know six of Jesus’ beliefs, prepare yourself to take the six soulful steps that will empower you to believe like Jesus as well.

From Disciple to Apostle

Just as Jesus needed to know, way back when, if The Twelve were ready to step up their spiritual game, so the world needs to know today. The world needs to know if the church is prepared to move from discipleship to apostleship; the world wants to know if the friends and followers of Jesus are ready to be Christ-like—to actively resist injustice and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves—and to act with sacrificial love.

I look forward to the Forty Days of Apostleship and sharing with you the six soulful steps to believe like Jesus so that you can answer yes. So much hangs in the balance.

This Lent may you be free to live with new beliefs, new courage, and new love. And may you be open to taking tangible actions that make a real difference in the world.

Miracles await.

The Secret to Church Renewal

The Secret to Church Renewal

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Feb 2, 2021

The Secret to Church Renewal

There’s good news and bad news when it comes to church renewal. First, the good news.  It’s going to be simpler to address than you thought.  Next, the bad news.  You won’t find the answers, or even the source of the decline, in any of the most obvious places.

The dictionary defines renewal as the replacing or repair of something that is worn out, run-down, or broken. It’s easy to look for what seems broken—like giving, worship attendance, level of participation, building repair or layout, or disciple-making systems—and then seek a series of fixes. All of the above issues will in fact respond to a process of renewal.  Yet none of them are the source of decline.

The source of decline is hiding in plain sight. Want to know the secret to church renewal? And the three underlying principles?

Here is the secret to renewal: renewal begins within. I don’t mean within the congregation. No, the answer is even closer to home than that. Church renewal begins within you.

Hidden-In-Plain-Sight Secret

I was reminded of this hidden-in-plain-sight secret at a recent Creating a Culture of Renewal retreat.  Participants designed a worship service that incorporated Romans 12:1-2. They reminded the church leaders of some basics of Christian faith including this:  Your mind can’t be aligned with the consciousness of God if you are too conformed to the patterns of this world.

Patterns of the World

While there are lots of patterns in this world, one of them is to pretend like nothing is wrong.  The other is to pretend that everything is wrong.  The first leads you to a constant state of denial.  The other to a constant state of lament, outrage, or resignation.  Either way, you can’t discern God’s will for you when your mind is caught up in the patterns of the world.

Another pattern of the world is to be dominated by fear. The potential fears that leaders are subject to are endless, including the following. Fear of what others think of you. Fear of getting it wrong. Fear of conflict. Fear of telling the truth. Fear of saying no. Fear of saying yes. Fear of not getting things done. Fear of loss of influence, or loss of authority. Fear of looking bad, or of not looking good.

Breaking Free of These Patterns

Breaking free of these patterns of the world is not easy. Jesus did it by getting away from the crowds, and even his friends, to be alone with God in prayer and communion.  The same is true for leaders today.  It’s important to spend time away from the constant drama of the world, to reconnect with your own body, mind, and soul. It’s also important to connect with people who feed you instead of drain you.

Too Simplistic?

In some ways this answer to renewal seems simplistic, misguided even. How can your relationship with God bring renewal to the church?  How can your prayer life or physical fitness impact congregational giving or worship attendance or someone else’s leadership? The answer is to be found in the three principles of renewal.

Three Principles of Renewal

Underlying the hidden-in-plain-sight secret to renewal—that renewal begins within—are three guiding principles of renewal.

  1. Your people can only go as far as you can lead them.
  2. You can only go as far as you are willing to let God lead you.
  3. Your fears, worries and concerns, i.e. the patterns of this world, are holding you back.

If it’s true that your people can only go as far as you can lead them then they will never be renewed if you’re not.  This is not a judgement. It’s an invitation.  To see where you are physically worn out, emotionally run-down, or spiritually broken. And to attend to the needs of your own body, mind and soul so that you can lead others more effectively.

How to Create a Culture of Renewal

Want to learn more about how you can create a culture of renewal? I invite you to attend a free seminar. You’ll learn the 3 stubborn barriers to achieving renewal, 3 life-giving miracles that renewal brings, and how to take the next step. Email an*@***************er.com to register.

In the meantime, if you’re a leader, remember that it’s important to be kind to yourself, to be courageous, and to spend more time with God.

5 Ways to Revitalize During a Pandemic

5 Ways to Revitalize During a Pandemic

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Jan 26, 2021

With increased vaccine distribution in sight, people are looking toward life returning to pre-pandemic normal again.  But why settle for normal when something even greater is possible?

In this article I am going to share with you five ways to revitalize congregations during a pandemic. Employing these best practices now sets you up for better-than-normal ministry once the virus begins to recede.

Best Practices for Revitalization

In Creating a Culture of Renewal coaching groups, we teach church leaders the best practices of congregational revitalization. I’m excited to share some of them with you here, as many of our participants report steady or increased participation, giving and worship attendance in the midst of the pandemic.

Options Attract People

  1. Keep digital worship alongside live worship. Just as it is rare to boost overall worship attendance by combining live services, the same is true here. When you shut one down, you will likely lose people.

Instead of thinking about how to get people “back” or “in” to the church, think about how the worshiping community can reach “out” to include new people.  Experiment here. Try creating a hybrid experience by recording and posting in person worship services.  Alternatively, email orders of worship to people who choose not to participate online. Or you may supplement in person worship with an online Bible Study, book study, or an ethical study such as dismantling racism or ending food insecurity.

Make Worship Worthwhile

  1. Revitalize worship by creating opportunities to experience the sacred, not simply talk or sing about it. These days an experience of the divine Presence of God, as well as a sense of community, is replacing a focus on entertainment. And not a moment too soon.

While watching entertainment is ubiquitous–available with every swipe, scroll, and push of a button—it’s rare to be invited into an interactive experience of the Holy. Who wouldn’t want to have an experience of the presence of God? Or the miraculous touch of Jesus? Or the movement of the Spirit?

Here are some specific practices you can incorporate into worship:  quiet reflection, centering prayer, or lectio divina. Additionally, you can invite worshipers to light a candle in their homes, or to share an object that has sacred meaning for them.  The sharing of testimonies can also be inspiring.

Dream Like Jesus

  1. Lead with a vision. In Creating a Culture of Renewal, we distinguish between church improvement plans—where the church is the recipient of the vision—and kingdom-oriented plans where the church is the agent of the vision. The best practice is the church being the agent of the vision.  This takes guts and faith.

It helps to know that the world wants more of churches, not less. More vision, more hope, more miracles, more kindness, and more demonstrations of faith. Your community will respond positively when your vision is big enough—and inclusive enough—to reflect a God of unconditional love.

Innovate During Hard Times

  1. Pandemics push us to make progress. The Black Plagues of the 14th-16th centuries led to better working and living conditions for the very poor. The rise of the middle class can be traced back to that time. Shakespeare did some of his best work when the theaters closed down. Isaac Newton, driven into the countryside, worked on his theories of optics, physics and gravity.

In 18th century Philadelphia, in the midst of a yellow fever epidemic, the founding fathers developed the idea that they had to bear responsibility for the health of the citizenry.  Public health in the US was born.

In the 1918 pandemic, the idea of childhood vaccines was born.  Social distancing was built into multi-family dwellings leading to 3-foot wide hallways, fire escapes, and private bathrooms for each family.

Practice Emotional intelligence

  1. Choose your words carefully. President Biden’s inaugural speech was an example of practicing emotional intelligence to meet the challenges of the day. While he addressed hard problems and named tough challenges, he also adopted an overall optimistic tone and employed visionary language. His speech was relevant, deeply personal, and contained spiritual motifs. Finally, he used his platform to call people to transcend barriers to work together.

When you speak to your people, try using the same approach. First, name the challenges and problems before you. Second, lay out an optimistic vision for the future that calls people to work together for the common good. Third, reveal something about yourself, and your faith, as you ground it in spiritual and biblical themes. Fourth, show how your vision is relevant to your time and place.

These best practices withstand the test of time, even as you adapt them for your setting.  The need for options, to experience the sacred, to be inspired by vision, to innovate through hard times, and to practice emotional intelligence is greater than ever.  Your time to shine is now. Let me know how it goes for you!

Spiritual Lessons from Sedition

Spiritual Lessons from Sedition

by Rebekah Simon-Peter | Jan 13, 2021

We as a nation have been reeling from the events of last Wednesday at the Capitol when rioters from a nearby Trump rally pushed past Capitol police, broke into the Capitol and violently interrupted the work of Congress in certifying the electoral process votes. The lawless crowd—replete with Trump flags, Confederate flags, and anti-Semitic sweatshirts –was incited by the president and led by some members of Congress.

The sense of grief, outrage, confusion, and anger has been palpable. All four living presidents who preceded Trump have called this sedition or insurrection.

From a spiritual perspective, there are several things that are worth noting.

First, the events took place on Epiphany, the ancient celebration of the incarnation. Yet instead of revealing divine light and life, they revealed the darkness of white supremacy, while illuminating the danger of leadership built on lies.

Second, preachers addressed their congregations on the Baptism of the Lord Sunday. This is the same day on which Christians are called to remember their baptismal vows. United Methodists vow to renounce the spiritual forces of wickedness, reject the evil powers of this world, and repent of their sin. Additionally, they accept the freedom and power God gives to resist evil, injustice and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves.

Spiritually speaking, could this mob scene have been better timed? White supremacy has needed to be routed for a very long time. But how do we actually accomplish living into our baptismal vows? What does repentance look like?

There are efforts to impeach the president, and to silence him on social media, both of which seem like important steps to take. But will his inability to serve as president again or to rile up 88 million people at a time solve the problem of us?

No.

It’s easy, and satisfying, to point the finger and say, “that person or those people are the problem.”  But to be alive in America is to swim in the waters of systemic racism, to breathe the air of polarization, and to accept the inevitability of division and blame.

To truly repent of national sin takes more time than a public censure or de-platforming.  (Although four years of this president’s cruelty and lies has felt quite long indeed.) Repentance requires a deeper, more personal review.

This is where Lectio Divina comes in.

This ancient style of reading and hearing the scriptures calls us to enter into the frame of the story. As a scripture passage is read slowly, four times, listeners are invited to visualize themselves as different characters in the story, imagining each character’s feelings and motivations. The net effect is that instead of distancing oneself in blame, judgement or even pity from heinous characters—say the angry mob who called out “Crucify him!” or Pilate who gave the order, or the Roman soldiers who nailed Jesus to the cross—the listener gains a bit of understanding, even compassion.  Out of this shifting perspective, the listener moves into forgiveness of the other, and repentance of their own sin.

Ultimately, as Christians, we are called to manifest a higher consciousness, and to live into Jesus’ Kin(g)dom vision. I pray that these expressions of life are built on racial equity, and trustworthy leadership, among other qualities. But, you can’t step into a new future saddled with old resentments. We must live into our baptismal vows. Lectio Divina provides a step in that direction.

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