
June
2002
Page 1 -
Beware of the Stronghold of
Cold Love
By Francis Frangipane
Page
2
- God Will
Guide Us
By
Kevin McClure
Page
3 - Beauty
By Mary
Ann Herzan
Page 4 -
A Lutheran Charismatic Bible School
Page 5 -
Q & A - Speaking in Tongues
By Paul Anderson
Page 6 - Directors
Note
Beware of the
Stronghold of Cold Love
By Francis Frangipane
Is your love
growing and becoming softer, brighter, more daring and more visible? Or is it
becoming more discriminating, more calculating, less vulnerable and less
available? This is a very important issue, for your Christianity is only as
real as your love is. A measurable decrease in your ability to love is
evidence that a stronghold of cold love is developing within you.
Guard Against
Unforgiveness!
"Because lawlessness is increased, most people's love will grow cold"
(Matt 24:12).
A major area of spiritual
warfare that has come against the church is the sphere of church relation-
ships. Satan knows that a church divided against itself cannot stand. We may
enjoy temporary blessings and seasonal breakthroughs, but to win a city-wide
war, Jesus is raising up a united, city-wide church. An earmark of this
corporate, overcoming church will be its commitment to love. Yet, because of
the increasing iniquity in the end of this age, true Christian love will be
severely assaulted.
There is no spiritual unity, and hence no lasting victory, without love. Love
is a passion for oneness. Bitterness, on the other hand, is characterized by a
noticeable lack of love. This cold love is a demonic stronghold. In our
generation cold love is becoming increasingly more common. It shuts down the
power of prayer and disables the flow of healing and outreach. In fact, where
there is persistent and hardened unforgiveness in a person or church, the
demonic world (known in Matt 18:34 as "torturers") has unhindered access.
The Scriptures warn that
even a little root of bitterness in a person's life can spring up and defile
many (Heb 12:15). Bitterness is unfulfilled revenge. Another's thoughtlessness
or cruelty may have wounded us deeply. It is inevitable that, in a world of
increasing harshness and cruelty, you will at some time be hurt. But if you
fail to react with love and forgiveness, if you retain in your spirit the debt
the offender owes you, that offense will rob your heart of its capacity to
love. Imperceptibly, you will become a member of the majority of end-time
Christians whose love is "growing cold."
Bitterness is a classic symptom of the stronghold of cold love. To deal with
this, you must repent of this attitude and forgive the one who hurt you. This
painful experience was allowed by God to teach you how to love your enemies.
If you still have unforgiveness toward someone who hurt you, you have failed
this test. Fortunately, this was just a test, not a final exam. You actually
need to thank God for the opportunity to grow in divine love. Thank Him that
your whole life is not being swallowed up in bitterness and resentment.
Millions of souls are swept off into eternal judgment every day without any
hope of escaping from embitterment, but you have been given God's answer for
your pain. God gives you a way out: love!
As you embrace God's love and begin to walk in forgiveness, you are actually
pulling down the stronghold of bitterness and its manifestation of cold love
in your life. Because of this experience, you will eventually have more love
than you ever did. You truly do need to thank God.
Love Without Commitment
Is Not Love
"And at that time many will fall away and will betray one another and
hate one another. And many false prophets will arise, and will mislead many.
And because lawlessness is increased, the love of many will grow cold" (Matt
24:10-12).
I want to make it perfectly
clear: there is no such thing as love without commitment. The measure of your
love is found in the depth of your commitment. How often I have heard people
tell me, "I loved once, but I was hurt." Or, "I was committed to Christian
service, but they used me." People withdraw from being committed, never
realizing that their love is growing cold! It may not seem like they have
become cold-they still go to church, read the Bible, tithe, sing and look like
Christians-but inside they have become distant and aloof from other people.
They have withdrawn from the love of God.
Jesus said, "Stumbling blocks are inevitable..." (Matt 18:7). In your walk
there will be times when even good people have bad days. As long as you live
on earth, there will never be a time when "stumbling blocks" cease to be found
upon your path. People do not stumble over boulders, but over stones, little
things. To stumble is to stop walking and fall. Have you stumbled over
someone's weakness or sin lately? Have you gotten back up and continued loving
as you did before, or has that fall caused you to withdraw somewhat from
walking after love? To preserve the quality of love in your heart, you must
forgive those who have caused you to stumble.
Every time you refuse to
forgive or fail to overlook a weakness in another, your heart not only hardens
toward them, it hardens toward God. You cannot form a negative opinion of
someone (even though they may deserve it!) and allow that opinion to
crystallize into an attitude. For every time you do, an aspect of your heart
will cool toward God. You may still think you are open to God, but the
Scriptures are clear: "...the one who does not love his brother whom he has
seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen" (I Jn 4:20). You may not like
what someone has done, but you do not have an option to stop loving them. Love
is your only option.
What do I mean by love?
First, I do not merely mean "tough love." I mean gentle, affectionate,
sensitive, open, persistent love. God will be tough when He needs to be, and
we will be firm when He tells us to be, but beneath our firmness must be an
underground river of love waiting to spring into action. By "love" I mean a
compassion that is empowered by faith and prayer to see God's best come forth
in the one I love. When I have love for someone, I have predetermined that I
am going to stand with them, regardless of what they are going through.
We each need people who are
committed to us as individuals; people who know we are not perfect, but love
us anyway. The manifestation of God's Kingdom will not come without people
being committed to each other to reach God's fullness. We are not talking
about salvation; we are talking about growing up in that salvation until we
love and are committed to each other with Jesus' love.
Many people will stumble
over little faults and human weaknesses. These minor things are quickly pumped
up by the enemy into great big problems. Oh, how frail are the excuses people
use to justify withdrawing from others! In reality, these problems, often with
a church or pastor, are a smokescreen which mask the person's lack of love.
We need to overcome our
hang-ups about commitment, for no one will attain the fullness of God's
purposes on earth without being committed to imperfect people along the way.
"Well, as soon as I find a
church that believes as I do, I will be committed." This is a dangerous
excuse, because as soon as you decide you do not want to forgive, or God
begins to deal with the quality of your love, you will blame your withdrawing
on some minor doctrinal difference. The Kingdom of God is not based on mere
doctrines, it is founded upon relationships-relationships with God and,
because of God, with one another. Doctrines only help define those
relationships. We are not "anti-doctrine," but we are against empty doctrines,
which seem like virtues but are simply excuses that justify cold love.
The Greatest Commandments
An expert in the Law once asked Jesus which was the greatest commandment. His
reply was wonderful. He said, "'You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your
strength.' The second is like the first, 'You shall love your neighbor as
yourself'" (Mark 12:28-29). Jesus then said that "the second commandment
is like the first." When you love God, your love for others will be like your
love for God: the "second is like the first." The more you unconditionally
love God, the more you will unconditionally love others.
To those whose attitude is "just Jesus and me" I say, it is wonderful you
found Jesus. But you cannot truly have Jesus and simultaneously not do what He
says. The outgrowth of love and faith in Christ is love and faith like
Christ's, which means we are committed, even as He is, to His people.
You see, the Kingdom of God is not in you or in me. It is in us, corporately.
We are being perfected into a unit (Jn 17). To have the Kingdom, we must be
committed to one another as individuals and as churches. If Christ accepts us
while we are still imperfect, we must also accept one another. The people who
possess the Kingdom of God in its reality are people who overcome the
obstacles of each other's faults. They help each other become what God has
called them to be: the living body of Jesus Christ.
Remember, the goal of
pulling down the stronghold of cold love is to see the oneness of Christ's
body revealed. You will be challenged in this, but if you persist, you will
discover the heights and depths, the length and breadth of Christ's love. You
will become a body filled and flooded with God Himself.
(Taken in part from The Three Battlegrounds. Used by permission of Arrow
Publications. For more information about Francis' ministry and publications,
please visit his website at:
www.inchristsimage.org.)
Francis Frangipane is the senior minister of River of Life Ministries in
Cedar Rapids, IA. Francis has been instrumental in uniting thousands of
pastors in prayer in hundreds of cities. With nearly a million copies of his
best-selling books in print, and with an expanding radio and TV ministry
called, "In Christ's Image", he is in much demand worldwide. Francis will be
speaking at our Holy Spirit Conference on Wednesday, August 7 and Thursday,
August 8. He will also be our guest speaker at the Pre-conference Pastor's Day
on Wednesday, August 7.