This document is a preface and first chapter from a book containing three chapters on basic elements of the Christian life. The preface indicates the book contains material previously published separately as three booklets by Witness Lee and Watchman Nee.
The first chapter discusses the importance of spending time with God daily through prayer and reading the Bible. It recommends setting aside 30 minutes each morning to pray and read the Bible without focusing on knowledge, but on communing with God and enjoying Him. The chapter describes a method of "pray-reading" where the reader prays the words of the Bible as they read them aloud. It asserts this practice can nourish believers spiritually and change their experience of Christ.
This document provides a 4-step guide to developing a close bond with Christ: 1) Read the Bible daily to learn about God and apply its teachings; 2) Pray constantly in sincerity to communicate with God and seek his help; 3) Fast regularly by depriving yourself of food/drink to focus spiritually and grow stronger in faith; 4) Sing praises to God through music, poetry and dance to glorify, worship and commune with him. Following these steps will help maintain a relationship with Christ through good and bad times and prepare for eternal life.
The document discusses prophecy and hearing God's voice. It argues that prophecy is simply hearing from God and obeying, which all Christians are capable of. Common experiences like feeling led to call someone or share a scripture are examples of prophecy. The testimony of Jesus, which is the spirit of prophecy, is about doing what He did by hearing from the Father. All believers can develop their ability to hear God's voice through spending time with Him in prayer and meditation.
This document discusses the importance of understanding how the Holy Spirit teaches in order to properly understand and interpret the Bible. It argues that without guidance from the Holy Spirit, who reveals God's thoughts behind the words, people will misunderstand or come to wrong conclusions about what the Bible says due to relying only on human wisdom. The lack of understanding how the Holy Spirit teaches has led to hundreds of denominations with differing interpretations and many mistakes in theology. Learning how the Holy Spirit teaches through "things of the spirit" is presented as crucial for believers.
This document summarizes a lesson on prayer taught from Andrew Murray's work "With Christ in the School of Prayer." The lesson focuses on three key aspects of prayer according to Jesus: keep it secret, keep it uninflated, and keep praying with confidence. It discusses how prayer is both simple yet profound. While initially prayer may seem easy, with practice it becomes more difficult as one's shortcomings and dependence on God are revealed. The lesson emphasizes that the Holy Spirit is the greatest gift from God and should be the primary focus of prayers, as it is through the Spirit that one can truly know and commune with the Father. It challenges believers to continually ask God to teach them to pray more effectively and move heaven with their prayers
Loving relationships are built on loving two-way communication. True Christianity is just such a relationship--one that grows stronger and deeper through honest, open communication. Jesus is just waiting to speak to you.
God still speaks and wants to communicate directly with individuals. He loves each person deeply and provides ways to develop a personal relationship, including through prayer, reading the Bible, and listening for God's voice. God may speak through thoughts, dreams, other people, or by giving prophetic messages. To receive prophecies, one must have faith, be filled with the Holy Spirit, pray for the gift of prophecy, develop intimacy with God through prayer and reading the Bible, and listen with an open and obedient heart.
This document provides an overview of how to study the Bible in four steps: observation, interpretation, application, and preparation. It discusses key aspects of each step. For observation, it emphasizes paying close attention to context, key terms, questions, and details. Interpretation involves understanding what the text meant to the original audience and identifying timeless principles. Application means applying those principles to one's own life. Preparation includes confession, seeking wisdom, and focusing on God's word. The document recommends various resources and gives tips for effective Bible study.
God is majestic and transcendent, far above His creation. He created everything exactly as He wished and remains sovereign, controlling all things in the universe. Knowing God's attributes, like His sovereignty and majesty, helps us understand who He is and accept our circumstances, trusting that He is in control. It also encourages praying for others and trusting God for the strength and resources for ministry. Studying God's attributes reveals more of who He is and leads to greater worship.
This document provides a 4-step guide to developing a close bond with Christ: 1) Read the Bible daily to learn about God and apply its teachings; 2) Pray constantly in sincerity to communicate with God and seek his help; 3) Fast regularly by depriving yourself of food/drink to focus spiritually and grow stronger in faith; 4) Sing praises to God through music, poetry and dance to glorify, worship and commune with him. Following these steps will help maintain a relationship with Christ through good and bad times and prepare for eternal life.
The document discusses prophecy and hearing God's voice. It argues that prophecy is simply hearing from God and obeying, which all Christians are capable of. Common experiences like feeling led to call someone or share a scripture are examples of prophecy. The testimony of Jesus, which is the spirit of prophecy, is about doing what He did by hearing from the Father. All believers can develop their ability to hear God's voice through spending time with Him in prayer and meditation.
This document discusses the importance of understanding how the Holy Spirit teaches in order to properly understand and interpret the Bible. It argues that without guidance from the Holy Spirit, who reveals God's thoughts behind the words, people will misunderstand or come to wrong conclusions about what the Bible says due to relying only on human wisdom. The lack of understanding how the Holy Spirit teaches has led to hundreds of denominations with differing interpretations and many mistakes in theology. Learning how the Holy Spirit teaches through "things of the spirit" is presented as crucial for believers.
This document summarizes a lesson on prayer taught from Andrew Murray's work "With Christ in the School of Prayer." The lesson focuses on three key aspects of prayer according to Jesus: keep it secret, keep it uninflated, and keep praying with confidence. It discusses how prayer is both simple yet profound. While initially prayer may seem easy, with practice it becomes more difficult as one's shortcomings and dependence on God are revealed. The lesson emphasizes that the Holy Spirit is the greatest gift from God and should be the primary focus of prayers, as it is through the Spirit that one can truly know and commune with the Father. It challenges believers to continually ask God to teach them to pray more effectively and move heaven with their prayers
Loving relationships are built on loving two-way communication. True Christianity is just such a relationship--one that grows stronger and deeper through honest, open communication. Jesus is just waiting to speak to you.
God still speaks and wants to communicate directly with individuals. He loves each person deeply and provides ways to develop a personal relationship, including through prayer, reading the Bible, and listening for God's voice. God may speak through thoughts, dreams, other people, or by giving prophetic messages. To receive prophecies, one must have faith, be filled with the Holy Spirit, pray for the gift of prophecy, develop intimacy with God through prayer and reading the Bible, and listen with an open and obedient heart.
This document provides an overview of how to study the Bible in four steps: observation, interpretation, application, and preparation. It discusses key aspects of each step. For observation, it emphasizes paying close attention to context, key terms, questions, and details. Interpretation involves understanding what the text meant to the original audience and identifying timeless principles. Application means applying those principles to one's own life. Preparation includes confession, seeking wisdom, and focusing on God's word. The document recommends various resources and gives tips for effective Bible study.
God is majestic and transcendent, far above His creation. He created everything exactly as He wished and remains sovereign, controlling all things in the universe. Knowing God's attributes, like His sovereignty and majesty, helps us understand who He is and accept our circumstances, trusting that He is in control. It also encourages praying for others and trusting God for the strength and resources for ministry. Studying God's attributes reveals more of who He is and leads to greater worship.
The document provides guides for leading Bible study discussions over 4 days. Day 2 focuses on Joshua 7:1-26, in which the Israelites are defeated in battle due to Achan's sin of taking spoils. The passage emphasizes the need to purge sin from the community to reconcile with God. Day 3 examines Joshua 22:1-34, where a misunderstanding nearly causes conflict, but leaders communicate to resolve issues. Day 4 looks at Matthew 18:21-36, where Jesus teaches that those forgiven much should forgive others, showing the relationship between reconciling with God and others. The guides provide discussion questions and background to help leaders facilitate understanding and application of the themes.
The document discusses the importance of personal Bible study. It states that the Bible is the only source of divine authority that provides direction, hope, peace, and understanding. Studying the Bible transforms people from earthly to spiritual minds so they can reflect Christ. The benefits of knowing God's word include truth, blessing, victory over sin and temptation, growth, power, and guidance. Regular Bible reading and study helps develop strong Christian character and spiritual fitness through developing the habit of daily reading, starting slow, and meditating on what is read. Personal Bible study is important lifelong work.
This document discusses various spiritual disciplines that can promote spiritual growth among believers based on scripture. It provides background research showing that most people accept Jesus Christ at a young age, with the majority doing so before age 18. The disciplines discussed include hearing/listening to God's word, reading God's word, memorizing scripture, studying the Bible, meditation, prayer, worship, evangelism, serving, stewardship, fasting, silence/solitude, and journaling. Practical tips are provided for effectively practicing many of these disciplines, such as finding time to read the Bible daily and memorizing one verse each day. The purpose of the disciplines is to achieve godliness and Christ-likeness.
This document provides an introduction to effective communication of the word of God. It begins with a brief Bible passage charging communicators to preach God's word. Several sections then explain how to exegete and analyze Scripture by identifying the theme, topic, truth, and thrust. Examples are given of exegeting Ephesians 1. Further sections cover how to do exposition by understanding the true needs of the audience and developing a thesis. The goal throughout is to properly understand and apply the Bible so its message can be clearly communicated.
The document provides guidance for connecting with the Holy Spirit over 7 days through speaking in tongues. It instructs waking up early each day for 2 hours of praying in tongues. Participants are asked to journal their experiences and share daily reports in a WhatsApp group. Zoom calls are scheduled for Day 1, 3, and 7 to allow for fellowship and sharing of testimonies. Upon completing the 7 days, participants will engage in a one month Bible study to help turn the discipline into a lifestyle of daily walking with the Holy Spirit. The program aims to establish intimacy between the Holy Spirit and each participant.
The document discusses how prayer, and specifically the practice of Lectio Divina, can transform one's life. It provides the following key points:
- Prayer, and praying specific passages from the Bible, is emphasized throughout Scripture and was practiced by godly men and women whose lives changed nations.
- Lectio Divina involves slowly and deliberately praying passages from the Bible, allowing God to speak through His word and connect with one's spirit, resulting in transformation.
- A four step process is outlined for Lectio Divina: selecting a passage, meditating on a word or phrase, discerning what God may be saying, and finally allowing one's heart and the Scripture to become one through
This document provides an introduction and overview to a class on the first five books of the Hebrew Bible known as Torah. It discusses different interpretations of what Torah means and encompasses. It notes that while the text will be analyzed from multiple scholarly perspectives, the primary focus will be on exploring the spiritual and ethical dimensions of the text. The document then begins an analysis of the first chapter of Genesis, discussing different translations and interpretations of key verses, and emphasizing what these reveal about God's relationship with humanity.
The document provides guidance on how to get more from personal Bible study. It discusses that the Bible has a single author, God, and a unifying theme of God's plan to save humanity, though it was written by many authors over time. It acknowledges some misconceptions people have that prevent study, like thinking it is too hard to understand or boring. The document then gives strategies to overcome factors like historical, cultural, philosophical, and linguistic gaps between biblical times and now. These include thorough reading, using study aids, and allowing the Holy Spirit to guide understanding. It emphasizes regularly studying with the intent to know God better in order to be refined, reoriented, renewed and restored. The document concludes by outlining different types
For Teenagers: Wonder of the Word - Digging into the wordChris Yeo
This document provides an overview of the Bible and strategies for studying it. It discusses the Bible's structure, including the Old Testament, New Testament, and different book types. Memory verses are selected for students to recite. Methods for digging deeper into scripture are presented, such as the 5W approach using a verse from John 3:16 as an example. Bible reading plans from apps and hard copies are recommended to help students regularly engage with God's word. The importance of reading the Bible is emphasized to gain spiritual strength and guidance.
This 90-day program focuses on intense daily scripture study, gospel topics, and applying what is learned through action. It includes:
- Reading the Book of Mormon and other scriptures daily
- Studying Preach My Gospel, general conference talks, and church magazines weekly
- Memorizing scripture mastery passages biweekly
- Working on Duty to God/Personal Progress on Sundays
- Daily prayer, pondering, service, and journal writing
- Fasting and temple attendance monthly
Participants can track their progress online at SP90X.com. Consistency is emphasized for spiritual and personal growth.
Knowing the real God volume 1_This is Eternal LIfeTOMISIN AJILEYE
Do you want to know God? Do you have questions about God? Do you wonder about who you are? This is a series you need to read. Do you wonder how much God knows? Do you wonder about God's Al-knowing knowledge?
This document outlines a presentation on how to study the Bible personally. It discusses the importance of Bible study for spiritual growth, maturity and effectiveness. The key steps outlined are observation, interpretation and application. Observation involves asking who, what, where, when, why and what questions of the text. Interpretation looks at content, context, comparison, culture and consultation. Application involves relating the meaning to one's own life and practicing it. The presentation uses the example of Mark 4:35-42 and Romans 12:1-2 to demonstrate the process and concludes by encouraging regular Bible study.
- The document is a sermon that emphasizes putting one's faith in the word of God rather than material things or rituals.
- It references the story of the Centurion who had faith that Jesus could heal his servant merely by speaking, showing faith in the power of God's word.
- The main point is that the word of God, as spoken in the sermons, is what gives life, salvation, healing and fulfills all needs, not money, rituals or other things. One must have faith in the word alone.
The document provides instructions for life journaling to help Christians hear from God regularly through scripture. It explains that a disciple attends daily communion with God and builds knowledge through God's word. The SIMPLE procedure involves silencing one's world, inviting the Holy Spirit, memorizing and meditating on a verse, praying accordingly, listening for application, and ending with thanksgiving. Specific guidelines are given for each step to structure journaling and applying God's message.
The document discusses different approaches to prayer and perspectives on the nature of prayer. It describes prayer as:
1) A relational activity, where prayer is how God relates to us and how we relate to God and others.
2) Beginning with God, as a response to God's inner working in us through the Holy Spirit.
3) A way of life, involving talking with God and listening to God.
The document explores biblical and theological foundations for understanding prayer as relationship with God.
Simple Tips for Understanding the Bible - By Leroy RamaphokoDikaps123
This document provides 7 tips for understanding the Bible:
1. Be willing to study the Bible diligently on your own.
2. Ask God for divine guidance through prayer to help correctly understand scripture.
3. Compare different parts of scripture to get a fuller picture rather than making conclusions from single verses.
4. Do not add or subtract meanings from biblical texts that are not directly stated.
The document argues that the King James Bible is the safest version for Christians to use because it contains God's exact words that are true, inspired, settled, preserved, and magnified. It claims modern Bible versions undermine important doctrines like the Trinity, the virgin birth, and salvation by faith alone. The document analyzes several Bible verses side by side in the KJV and modern versions to show how the modern versions remove or change key words and phrases. It suggests modern versions are more supportive of false teachings like salvation by works. The implication is that believers should only use the KJV in order to avoid relying on versions that contradict core Christian doctrines.
discipleship101.vasic discxipleship course outline for Christian’sNadejaJoyCPeralta
This document provides a summary of Session Three which focuses on why humans were created. The key points are:
1. Humans were created to know God intimately through prayer and reading the Bible. The session encourages spending time with God through these spiritual disciplines.
2. The story of Mary and Martha is discussed, noting how Mary chose to sit at Jesus' feet and listen to His teachings, while Martha was distracted by her household tasks. Jesus affirmed that Mary had chosen the better part.
3. Christians are instructed to communicate with God through prayer, which involves praising Him, repenting of sins, asking God for needs, and yielding to His will. Various Bible passages are presented on studying Scripture and the
This document provides guidance on developing a regular practice of reading the Bible. It covers the reasons to read the Bible such as it being the word of God and a means of obedience. It recommends making Bible reading a daily habit and choosing a translation that is easy to understand. The document then presents a four-step method of reading devotionally: selecting a passage, identifying parts of the text, focusing on a key point, and considering how to practice or apply what was learned. Tips are also provided for maximizing the reading experience, such as using color-coding and journaling.
The document provides guides for leading Bible study discussions over 4 days. Day 2 focuses on Joshua 7:1-26, in which the Israelites are defeated in battle due to Achan's sin of taking spoils. The passage emphasizes the need to purge sin from the community to reconcile with God. Day 3 examines Joshua 22:1-34, where a misunderstanding nearly causes conflict, but leaders communicate to resolve issues. Day 4 looks at Matthew 18:21-36, where Jesus teaches that those forgiven much should forgive others, showing the relationship between reconciling with God and others. The guides provide discussion questions and background to help leaders facilitate understanding and application of the themes.
The document discusses the importance of personal Bible study. It states that the Bible is the only source of divine authority that provides direction, hope, peace, and understanding. Studying the Bible transforms people from earthly to spiritual minds so they can reflect Christ. The benefits of knowing God's word include truth, blessing, victory over sin and temptation, growth, power, and guidance. Regular Bible reading and study helps develop strong Christian character and spiritual fitness through developing the habit of daily reading, starting slow, and meditating on what is read. Personal Bible study is important lifelong work.
This document discusses various spiritual disciplines that can promote spiritual growth among believers based on scripture. It provides background research showing that most people accept Jesus Christ at a young age, with the majority doing so before age 18. The disciplines discussed include hearing/listening to God's word, reading God's word, memorizing scripture, studying the Bible, meditation, prayer, worship, evangelism, serving, stewardship, fasting, silence/solitude, and journaling. Practical tips are provided for effectively practicing many of these disciplines, such as finding time to read the Bible daily and memorizing one verse each day. The purpose of the disciplines is to achieve godliness and Christ-likeness.
This document provides an introduction to effective communication of the word of God. It begins with a brief Bible passage charging communicators to preach God's word. Several sections then explain how to exegete and analyze Scripture by identifying the theme, topic, truth, and thrust. Examples are given of exegeting Ephesians 1. Further sections cover how to do exposition by understanding the true needs of the audience and developing a thesis. The goal throughout is to properly understand and apply the Bible so its message can be clearly communicated.
The document provides guidance for connecting with the Holy Spirit over 7 days through speaking in tongues. It instructs waking up early each day for 2 hours of praying in tongues. Participants are asked to journal their experiences and share daily reports in a WhatsApp group. Zoom calls are scheduled for Day 1, 3, and 7 to allow for fellowship and sharing of testimonies. Upon completing the 7 days, participants will engage in a one month Bible study to help turn the discipline into a lifestyle of daily walking with the Holy Spirit. The program aims to establish intimacy between the Holy Spirit and each participant.
The document discusses how prayer, and specifically the practice of Lectio Divina, can transform one's life. It provides the following key points:
- Prayer, and praying specific passages from the Bible, is emphasized throughout Scripture and was practiced by godly men and women whose lives changed nations.
- Lectio Divina involves slowly and deliberately praying passages from the Bible, allowing God to speak through His word and connect with one's spirit, resulting in transformation.
- A four step process is outlined for Lectio Divina: selecting a passage, meditating on a word or phrase, discerning what God may be saying, and finally allowing one's heart and the Scripture to become one through
This document provides an introduction and overview to a class on the first five books of the Hebrew Bible known as Torah. It discusses different interpretations of what Torah means and encompasses. It notes that while the text will be analyzed from multiple scholarly perspectives, the primary focus will be on exploring the spiritual and ethical dimensions of the text. The document then begins an analysis of the first chapter of Genesis, discussing different translations and interpretations of key verses, and emphasizing what these reveal about God's relationship with humanity.
The document provides guidance on how to get more from personal Bible study. It discusses that the Bible has a single author, God, and a unifying theme of God's plan to save humanity, though it was written by many authors over time. It acknowledges some misconceptions people have that prevent study, like thinking it is too hard to understand or boring. The document then gives strategies to overcome factors like historical, cultural, philosophical, and linguistic gaps between biblical times and now. These include thorough reading, using study aids, and allowing the Holy Spirit to guide understanding. It emphasizes regularly studying with the intent to know God better in order to be refined, reoriented, renewed and restored. The document concludes by outlining different types
For Teenagers: Wonder of the Word - Digging into the wordChris Yeo
This document provides an overview of the Bible and strategies for studying it. It discusses the Bible's structure, including the Old Testament, New Testament, and different book types. Memory verses are selected for students to recite. Methods for digging deeper into scripture are presented, such as the 5W approach using a verse from John 3:16 as an example. Bible reading plans from apps and hard copies are recommended to help students regularly engage with God's word. The importance of reading the Bible is emphasized to gain spiritual strength and guidance.
This 90-day program focuses on intense daily scripture study, gospel topics, and applying what is learned through action. It includes:
- Reading the Book of Mormon and other scriptures daily
- Studying Preach My Gospel, general conference talks, and church magazines weekly
- Memorizing scripture mastery passages biweekly
- Working on Duty to God/Personal Progress on Sundays
- Daily prayer, pondering, service, and journal writing
- Fasting and temple attendance monthly
Participants can track their progress online at SP90X.com. Consistency is emphasized for spiritual and personal growth.
Knowing the real God volume 1_This is Eternal LIfeTOMISIN AJILEYE
Do you want to know God? Do you have questions about God? Do you wonder about who you are? This is a series you need to read. Do you wonder how much God knows? Do you wonder about God's Al-knowing knowledge?
This document outlines a presentation on how to study the Bible personally. It discusses the importance of Bible study for spiritual growth, maturity and effectiveness. The key steps outlined are observation, interpretation and application. Observation involves asking who, what, where, when, why and what questions of the text. Interpretation looks at content, context, comparison, culture and consultation. Application involves relating the meaning to one's own life and practicing it. The presentation uses the example of Mark 4:35-42 and Romans 12:1-2 to demonstrate the process and concludes by encouraging regular Bible study.
- The document is a sermon that emphasizes putting one's faith in the word of God rather than material things or rituals.
- It references the story of the Centurion who had faith that Jesus could heal his servant merely by speaking, showing faith in the power of God's word.
- The main point is that the word of God, as spoken in the sermons, is what gives life, salvation, healing and fulfills all needs, not money, rituals or other things. One must have faith in the word alone.
The document provides instructions for life journaling to help Christians hear from God regularly through scripture. It explains that a disciple attends daily communion with God and builds knowledge through God's word. The SIMPLE procedure involves silencing one's world, inviting the Holy Spirit, memorizing and meditating on a verse, praying accordingly, listening for application, and ending with thanksgiving. Specific guidelines are given for each step to structure journaling and applying God's message.
The document discusses different approaches to prayer and perspectives on the nature of prayer. It describes prayer as:
1) A relational activity, where prayer is how God relates to us and how we relate to God and others.
2) Beginning with God, as a response to God's inner working in us through the Holy Spirit.
3) A way of life, involving talking with God and listening to God.
The document explores biblical and theological foundations for understanding prayer as relationship with God.
Simple Tips for Understanding the Bible - By Leroy RamaphokoDikaps123
This document provides 7 tips for understanding the Bible:
1. Be willing to study the Bible diligently on your own.
2. Ask God for divine guidance through prayer to help correctly understand scripture.
3. Compare different parts of scripture to get a fuller picture rather than making conclusions from single verses.
4. Do not add or subtract meanings from biblical texts that are not directly stated.
The document argues that the King James Bible is the safest version for Christians to use because it contains God's exact words that are true, inspired, settled, preserved, and magnified. It claims modern Bible versions undermine important doctrines like the Trinity, the virgin birth, and salvation by faith alone. The document analyzes several Bible verses side by side in the KJV and modern versions to show how the modern versions remove or change key words and phrases. It suggests modern versions are more supportive of false teachings like salvation by works. The implication is that believers should only use the KJV in order to avoid relying on versions that contradict core Christian doctrines.
discipleship101.vasic discxipleship course outline for Christian’sNadejaJoyCPeralta
This document provides a summary of Session Three which focuses on why humans were created. The key points are:
1. Humans were created to know God intimately through prayer and reading the Bible. The session encourages spending time with God through these spiritual disciplines.
2. The story of Mary and Martha is discussed, noting how Mary chose to sit at Jesus' feet and listen to His teachings, while Martha was distracted by her household tasks. Jesus affirmed that Mary had chosen the better part.
3. Christians are instructed to communicate with God through prayer, which involves praising Him, repenting of sins, asking God for needs, and yielding to His will. Various Bible passages are presented on studying Scripture and the
This document provides guidance on developing a regular practice of reading the Bible. It covers the reasons to read the Bible such as it being the word of God and a means of obedience. It recommends making Bible reading a daily habit and choosing a translation that is easy to understand. The document then presents a four-step method of reading devotionally: selecting a passage, identifying parts of the text, focusing on a key point, and considering how to practice or apply what was learned. Tips are also provided for maximizing the reading experience, such as using color-coding and journaling.
This document discusses the importance of Bible intake and spiritual disciplines for the Christian life. It emphasizes that no discipline is more important than regularly taking in God's word through reading, studying, and memorizing Scripture. The document provides guidance on practices like hearing sermons, studying the Bible, and memorizing verses. It encourages setting goals for Bible reading and offers tips like using study guides. Readers are reminded that growing in godliness requires allowing God's word to shape their lives over time through consistent Bible intake. When someone asks how to improve their Bible intake, the document recommends commitment to regular practices and not expecting mastery overnight.
This document outlines a 7 step process for prayer: 1) Choose a quiet place and consistent time for prayer. 2) Start with worship and praise for God's goodness. 3) Repent for sins and fully surrender to God. 4) Ask for guidance from the Holy Spirit and its fruits. 5) Read the Bible daily to hear from God. 6) Listen quietly for God's voice. 7) Intercede by praying for needs, healing, and protection. The overall goal is to develop a daily prayer routine that involves communicating with and listening to God through praise, repentance, scripture and petition.
Renew week 5 seek the presence of god lg questionskowboy62
This document discusses seeking the presence of God through stillness, prayer, and meditating on His word. It provides practical steps for these spiritual disciplines, including reading Scripture silently, listening for characteristics of God, thinking on how He has shown Himself, and praying in response. The group is encouraged to commit to these practices over the week and to support each other in doing so faithfully until their next meeting.
This document discusses the importance of the morning watch, which refers to the tranquil time in the morning when Christians fellowship with God. It makes three main points:
1) Morning is the time God set for distributing spiritual food to His children, just as the Israelites collected manna in the morning.
2) Morning symbolizes resurrection - it is a time of freshness, vitality and peace before being tarnished by secular concerns.
3) God calls us to fellowship with Him through the resurrected Christ, who provides abundance and fills our hearts with love and joy. Practicing morning watch was exemplified by Jesus and is vital for spiritual strength.
1) To know God, we must read and study his word, the Bible, and meditate on it alone and with other Christians.
2) The Bible is God's love letter to help us come to know him as our Father and obey him as our Lord.
3) God's word teaches us, corrects us, guides us in righteousness, and equips us to do good works.
This document discusses tools for spiritual growth in the Christian faith. It begins by stating that baptism in the Spirit is only the beginning and believers must continue growing. Key tools for growth discussed are prayer, Bible study, spiritual reading, teachings, fellowship, sacraments like communion and confession, and serving others. Prayer is emphasized as the primary means of relationship with God, and three principles for successful prayer are outlined: being faithful, led by the Spirit, and centered on Christ. The document encourages availing of the tools God has provided in order to grow in holiness.
This document is an introduction to a book about the importance and effects of praise. It discusses how praise affects every area of life, including relationships with God and in spiritual warfare. Praise brings intimacy with God and experiencing eternal life. The introduction emphasizes that praise is not optional for Christians, but is a direct command from God. It sets up the rest of the book to explore how praise affects believers, demons, and God himself. The purpose is to help readers understand why praise is so important and to walk in a new level of praise in their relationship with God.
Look at the spiritual discipline of Bible intake.
Feel free to check out my Youtube channel ("Bible A to Z"):
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCksmizy3de-HTruLFkHDCMA
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/BibleAtoZ1
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/Bible-A-to-Z-104071948506766
(Also on Instagram, BitChute, and Rumble)
The speaker discusses the importance of personal prayer and Scripture reading as crucial tools for spiritual growth. Some common reasons for not having a personal prayer time include thinking that going to church is enough, lack of understanding about prayer, lack of time, feeling unworthy, and finding it too difficult. However, with commitment to a scheduled daily prayer time, dealing with distractions, and openness to the Holy Spirit, regular prayer can become easier. Both prayer and Bible reading are needed to tap into God's power and live a Spirit-filled life.
Summer Splash Developing a devotional life part 1 of 2Albert Soto
This document provides an overview and summaries of a 2013 summer series on developing a devotional life. It includes:
- An introduction and schedule for the summer series focusing on having a devotional life, reading the Bible, and living in community.
- Summaries of three talks from the series addressing fuel for the devotional journey, foundations for reading the Bible, and friends for the journey of living in community.
- Additional summaries of methods for daily devotion, why to read the Bible, and an example of using the S.O.A.P. Bible study method in a journal entry. The document offers guidance and perspectives on spiritual growth through regular Bible reading and prayer.
This document discusses the importance of developing a daily devotional life centered around spending time with God through prayer and reading the Bible. It recommends starting the day with devotionals to invite God into your day and make Him your top priority. Specific tips provided include reading from the Old Testament, New Testament, Psalms and Proverbs daily and writing down what God is speaking, promising, commanding, warning, and applying to your life. Benefits mentioned are that your life, attitude, and direction will be positively changed as God transforms you through His Word.
“Fire goes out without wood, and quarrels disappear
when gossip stops. A quarrelsome person starts
fights as easily as hot embers light charcoal
or fire lights wood.”
The document discusses spiritual disciplines and their purpose of cultivating spiritual growth and a healthy relationship with God. It describes spiritual disciplines as practices that create time and space for life transformation by deepening our relationship with God. Christians throughout history have engaged in spiritual disciplines because they are modeled and taught by Jesus in the Bible. The document provides an overview of six Groundwork episodes that will explore specific spiritual disciplines in Scripture such as prayer, fasting, simplicity, silence, service, and Scripture study. It encourages engaging with the episodes to learn about applying these disciplines to one's spiritual life.
The Enchantment and Shadows_ Unveiling the Mysteries of Magic and Black Magic...Phoenix O
This manual will guide you through basic skills and tasks to help you get started with various aspects of Magic. Each section is designed to be easy to follow, with step-by-step instructions.
The Hope of Salvation - Jude 1:24-25 - MessageCole Hartman
Jude gives us hope at the end of a dark letter. In a dark world like today, we need the light of Christ to shine brighter and brighter. Jude shows us where to fix our focus so we can be filled with God's goodness and glory. Join us to explore this incredible passage.
A375 Example Taste the taste of the Lord, the taste of the Lord The taste of...franktsao4
It seems that current missionary work requires spending a lot of money, preparing a lot of materials, and traveling to far away places, so that it feels like missionary work. But what was the result they brought back? It's just a lot of photos of activities, fun eating, drinking and some playing games. And then we have to do the same thing next year, never ending. The church once mentioned that a certain missionary would go to the field where she used to work before the end of his life. It seemed that if she had not gone, no one would be willing to go. The reason why these missionary work is so difficult is that no one obeys God’s words, and the Bible is not the main content during missionary work, because in the eyes of those who do not obey God’s words, the Bible is just words and cannot be connected with life, so Reading out God's words is boring because it doesn't have any life experience, so it cannot be connected with human life. I will give a few examples in the hope that this situation can be changed. A375
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Why is this So? ~ Do Seek to KNOW (English & Chinese).pptxOH TEIK BIN
A PowerPoint Presentation based on the Dhamma teaching of Kamma-Vipaka (Intentional Actions-Ripening Effects).
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The texts are in English and Chinese.
4. CONTENTS
Title Page
Preface 5
1 A Time With the Lord 7
2 A Simple Way to Touch the Lord 13
3 Deep Calls Unto Deep 19
About Two Servants of the Lord 27
5.
6. PREFACE
This book is composed of three chapters, which present
some basic elements of the Christian life.
This material has been published previously as three sep-
arate booklets: A Time With the Lord and A Simple Way to
Touch the Lord by Witness Lee and Deep Calls Unto Deep by
Watchman Nee.
7.
8. CHAPTER ONE
A TIME WITH THE LORD
In his book on prayer, Andrew Murray tells of a question
raised by the chairman at a ministers’ conference: “Everyone
here who prays thirty minutes every day, hold up your hand.”
Of that whole congregation, only one hand was held up! The
chairman then asked all who prayed fifteen minutes daily to
hold up their hand. Half the hands went up. When he asked
who prayed five minutes daily, the remainder of the hands
were raised. Is not this the situation among us today? We all
must personally ask ourselves this question: “How much time
do I spend daily with the Lord?” The most prevailing need
among Christians today is to spend a certain amount of time
every day reading and praying in the presence of the Lord.
In the physical realm we need to spend time daily to
obtain physical nourishment by eating physical food. How
much more time we need to spend to obtain spiritual nourish-
ment by eating the spiritual food. According to the present
situation nearly all Christians know how to study, memorize,
meditate, and search the Scriptures for knowledge, but very
few know how to come to the Word of God to enjoy the Lord
and to receive spiritual nourishment.
As people who have God living within us, we need to set
aside some time each day to come to the Word of God to enjoy
Him, to feed upon Him, and to receive spiritual nourishment.
From the experiences and testimonies of others, it is clear
that we need to spend at least thirty minutes with the Lord
each day to contact Him and be strengthened by Him. During
this time we need to read and to pray, and this cannot be done
adequately in ten minutes. A longer time is necessary in order
to read and pray properly. Even half an hour for reading and
9. praying is too short, but surely we can spend half an hour
with the Lord every day to pray-read His Word, and the best
time for this is in the morning.
During this thirty minutes we must forget about knowledge,
a message, a movement, or a work, etc. All this must be for-
gotten and our whole attention given to spending proper and
adequate time in the Lord’s presence. As sons of God this is
the first and primary daily experience into which all Chris-
tians must be brought. For at least thirty minutes each day,
we must learn not to exercise our mind too much, but simply
to exercise our spirit in pray-reading. It is impossible for
any Christian who spends less than thirty minutes daily in
the presence of the Lord to be adequately spiritual and
healthy. This is a fixed principle. Can anyone be healthy who
does not eat daily?
If we will do this for a period of time, the Lord will work a
great change in us. Our experience of Christ will be deepened,
and eventually our influence toward others will be prevailing.
The whole situation among us will be radically changed, not
by teaching, studying, and exhorting, but by contacting the
Lord.
We must pay the price to spend this time with the Lord for
the sake of our spiritual growth. In the mornings we must not
love to lie sleepily in our beds so long. Watchman Nee once
told us that if we love our bed, we can never love the Lord.
There is a real struggle with us all between choosing the Lord
or choosing our bed.
If by the Lord’s mercy and grace we desire and agree to
spend more time daily in the presence of the Lord, what shall
we do? By what means can we touch the Word of God for
nourishment and enjoyment? We must learn to do only one
thing—we must mingle our reading with our praying. We
must contact the Lord by mingling our reading of the Bible
with prayer, and by mingling our prayer with reading. This is
why a new word, pray-read, has been used. We must
pray-read the Word.
First, begin by spontaneously offering a short prayer to
the Lord. Then open your Bible and start to read. While you
are reading, spontaneously respond to the Lord with what
8 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
10. you read. Do not read too many verses, such as a long para-
graph or a long section, before praying. While you are
reading, respond to the Lord by praying.
Do not try to pray long sentence prayers, and do not pray
for many things, asking the Lord to do something for you.
Simply learn to pray with the words you read. The valuable
prayer, the prayer which contacts the Lord, is to utter or
express what is responding within you as you read the Word.
This thirty minutes daily should be spent not asking the
Lord to do many things, but simply staying in communion
with Him and enjoying Him. The more we enjoy Him, the
more He will be pleased. If we ask Him to do this and that,
He will say, “Foolish child, it is unnecessary for you to ask Me
to do all those things. I can take care of that; you must only
enjoy Me.”
In the New Testament, the Lord Jesus speaks of God’s
Word as spiritual food: “But He answered and said, It is writ-
ten, ‘Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that
proceeds out through the mouth of God’ ” (Matt. 4:4). Every
word which proceeds out of the mouth of God is spiritual food
to nourish us. The Scriptures reveal at least three cases of
those who ate the Word of God. One is Jeremiah, who said,
“Your words were found and I ate them…” (Jer. 15:16). This
statement is not according to our human concept. If it were
not written in the Bible, we would never have thought that we
must eat the Word of God. We might say that we must learn
about the Word and study the Word. The most we would say is
that we must receive the Word of God. But we would never
use the word eat! Jeremiah ate the word of God. This means
he received the Word into him, assimilated it, and made it a
part of himself.
In the same verse Jeremiah also said, “Your word became
to me the gladness and joy of my heart.” This is a kind of
enjoyment. The Word, after being eaten, became a joy and
also a rejoicing. Joy is experienced within, and rejoicing is
expressed without. God’s Word is an enjoyment; after being
taken into us and assimilated into our very being, it becomes
joy within us and rejoicing without.
There are also a number of other verses which reveal this
A TIME WITH THE LORD 9
11. same thought to us. David said, “How sweet are Your words to
my taste! Sweeter than honey to my mouth!” (Psa. 119:103).
The Word is an enjoyment, and it is even sweeter and more
pleasant than honey to our taste. From all these verses we
realize that the Word of God is not only for us to learn, but
more for us to taste, to eat, to enjoy, and to digest.
Then in 1 Peter 2:2-3 we see that to eat the Word is to
taste the Lord. “As newborn babes, long for the guileless milk
of the word in order that by it you may grow unto salvation,
if you have tasted that the Lord is good.” In verse 2 there
is the eating of the Word, and in verse 3, the tasting of the
Lord. When we eat the Word of God as our spiritual nourish-
ment, we taste the Lord. Therefore, like Jeremiah, we
must eat the Word; then we will enjoy the Lord and receive
spiritual nourishment.
Another important verse is 1 Timothy 4:6b: “You will be a
good minister of Christ Jesus, being nourished with the words
of the faith.” Perhaps you have been in Christianity for many
years. Have you ever thought that we must be nourished in
the Word of God? As a rule, we always think that we must be
“taught” in the Word, by the Word, and with the Word. But
how many Christians have noticed the word nourished?
And how many have ever heard a message stressing the
importance of being nourished in the Word?
But the concept of the apostle Paul was that God’s Word is
food to nourish God’s children. We must be nourished in the
Word, not merely taught. Praise the Lord, nourished! Hallelu-
jah, we must be nourished with the Word, not just taught with
letters! Paul’s emphasis is not that we should be taught
with knowledge, but that we should be nourished with the
riches of the Word.
What is our intention when we come to read the Scrip-
tures? Has not our intention for many years been to know, to
learn, or to understand something? Our concept has been that
the Bible is a kind of teaching, a book full of doctrines. So we
came to the Word, intending to understand and to know some-
thing. However, we should not just exercise our wonderful
mind with our mysterious understanding to understand the
Word of God. We must forget about this. We should not
10 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
12. appraise our mind and appreciate our understanding so
much. We need to be blind men and even fools, simply coming
to the Word to exercise our spirit to pray-read. Forget about
the old, traditional way!
If we do not know how to pray-read, we will pray in the fol-
lowing way: first, we will rise early in the morning, feeling
that we must pray. Then we will try to pray like this: “Lord, I
thank You that You are so good…that You have given me
peace…that You have protected me from all kinds of
danger.…” Then we suddenly remember that we are about to
travel somewhere: “Oh, I am about to travel.…Lord, grant me
journeying mercies…the safety…from a car accident.…” After
further hesitation, we continue, “I have a friend in Vietnam…
Lord, remember him…remember James in Vietnam…also
Tom in West Germany…Lord, Tom is there…he needs Your
protection.…”
We must answer honestly. What does this kind of prayer
do for us? This is the way most Christians pray. But do they
receive any nourishment? Do they gain something which
causes them to be full of joy within and rejoicing without? No!
The right way is this: first, come to the Bible to pray-read.
There is no need to close your eyes. Keep your eyes on the
Word as you pray. In all sixty-six books of the Bible we cannot
find one verse which says that we should pray with our eyes
closed. But there is a verse which says that Jesus looked up to
the heavens, saying, “Father…” (John 17:1). He was looking at
heaven while He was praying! We would not argue in a doc-
trinal way, but we must realize that there is no need for us to
close our eyes to pray. Simply look at the printed page which
says, “In the beginning.…” Then with your eyes upon
the Word and praying from deep within say, “O Lord, ‘In the
beginning!’ Lord, I praise Thee ‘in the beginning was
the Word.’ Although I do not know what the Word is, the Word
was there. I praise Thee, Lord! ‘In the beginning!’ Hallelujah!
‘In the beginning!’ O Lord, ‘In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.’” Simply
try to pray in this way. Perhaps you will turn to another verse.
“There is now then no condemnation.” “O Lord, ‘There is now
no condemnation.’ O Lord, ‘Now no condemnation.’ Amen.
A TIME WITH THE LORD 11
13. ‘Now.’ O Lord. ‘Now.’ Amen! ‘Now no condemnation.’ Praise the
Lord! Hallelujah! ‘No condemnation,’ ” etc.
While we are pray-reading there is no need for us to compose
any sentences or create a prayer. Just pray-read the Word.
Pray the words of the Bible exactly as they read. Eventually,
you will see that the whole Bible is a prayer book! Not only is
the “Lord’s Prayer” a prayer, but the whole Bible is a prayer.
Open to any page, any line, any word of the Bible, and start to
pray with that portion of the Word. If you will continue
to pray-read in this way in the presence of the Lord for thirty
minutes, you will see what kind of enlightenment, watering,
nourishment, refreshing, strengthening, and satisfaction you
will obtain. From these thirty minutes, you will have a spiri-
tual breakfast which will last the entire day!
Although you may not understand a certain passage, you
still are nourished, because there is really something of God
in His Word. The Word of God is His very breath. (Second
Timothy 3:16 in the Greek is, “All Scripture is God-breathed.”)
Do not try only to learn the Bible. We must realize that
this is a book of life, not a book of knowledge. This book is
the divine embodiment of the living Spirit, and He is life. The
right way is not just to study or learn, but to contact the Word
by exercising our spirit to pray-read. Thousands have proven
that this is the right way. This way of coming to the Bible has
revolutionized their lives. If you would try it for five morn-
ings, you also will be changed. Your whole concept about the
Bible will be radically altered. It may not work so well at
first, but with practice, you will touch the living Spirit.
What the church needs today is not more knowledge and
teachings, but nourishment, and the way the Lord nourishes
His Body is by His Word. The Lord is eagerly waiting for a
way to nourish us and become our enjoyment. Pray-reading
gives Him that way. By this kind of prayer all the riches of
Christ will be brought into us and even wrought into us. No
teaching, doctrine, or knowledge can work Christ into us
to such an extent; it is only by this way of prayer. Therefore,
we all must learn to pray in this way. Eventually, we will be
brought out of ourselves, saturated with Christ, and perme-
ated with the Spirit.
12 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
14. CHAPTER TWO
A SIMPLE WAY TO TOUCH THE LORD
In his Epistles Paul unveils to us clearly and emphatically
the ultimate goal or objective of the Christian walk: “To know
Him” (Phil. 3:10); “to me, to live is Christ” (Phil. 1:21); “Christ
our life” (Col. 3:4). Through these verses we can see that the
reality and central point of the Christian life is simply Christ
Himself.
As people who have been born of God and have Christ
living within them, all Christians must be brought by the
Lord’s mercy to the point where they are no longer wholly
caught up in studying about Christ, doing something for
Christ, or even serving Christ, but rather are in the reality of
touching and experiencing Him in a living way day by day.
Romans 5:10 testifies, “For if we, being enemies, were recon-
ciled to God through the death of His Son, much more we will
be saved in His life.” This “much more” must be more of
Christ. A Christian’s initial salvation experience is indeed
wonderful. He is now one who has been born of God, but
“much more” he is to be saved by the life of Christ. Every
person who knows Christ as his Savior can and must be
brought into this experience of “much more,” which is enter-
ing into the fullness and reality of a life wholly centered on
Christ—experiencing, touching, and enjoying Him moment
by moment.
ACCOMPLISHING REDEMPTION
Today the Lord has made Himself available to all Chris-
tians for them to contact and experience in a full and living
way. The Bible reveals to us that in the beginning Jesus
Christ was God (John 1:1). Then one day this very God
15. became a man to dwell on the earth (John 1:14) and to accom-
plish redemption for all. He was among us as the Lamb of God
that through the shedding of His blood we might partake of
redemption (Eph. 1:7) and be reconciled to God. This is indeed
glorious! Christ became a man, lived on earth thirty-three
and a half years, and accomplished redemption for all. How-
ever, if Christ had stopped here, this would be the summation
of our Christian experience. All could enjoy forgiveness of
sins, but none could be saved by His life. None could touch
and experience Him in a daily, practical way. What then did
Christ do that every Christian may enter into this “much
more” experience? Was He only crucified and then buried?
Was that the end? We must praise Him that there is much
more!
A LIFE-GIVING SPIRIT
Shortly before His crucifixion He told His disciples that
He was among them but that He was going to be in them
(John 14:16-20). How could this be accomplished? If Jesus
had only died and been buried and that was the end, He could
never have entered into His disciples, nor could He enter into
His people today. But, praise the Lord, that three days after His
burial, He burst through the bonds of death and was raised
from the dead. So let us ask the question: In what form is He
today? He is the Spirit! “The last Adam [Christ] became a
life-giving Spirit” (1 Cor. 15:45b).
Jesus had told His disciples that He would enter into
them; therefore, shortly after His resurrection He appeared
before them in a room in which the doors were closed. He
could never have done this had He not been the Spirit. There,
“He breathed into them and said to them, Receive the Holy
Spirit” (John 20:22). At that moment Jesus, who had been
among them and outside of them, came into them. Christ
could never have entered into His disciples had He not been
the Spirit. “The Lord is the Spirit” (2 Cor. 3:17), and all that
have been reconciled to God have this life-giving Spirit dwell-
ing within them to be their bountiful supply and all they need.
Since Christ has become the Spirit and has entered into every
Christian, He is now so available to them; He is so easy for
14 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
16. them to contact, experience, and even enjoy. “Much more we
will be saved in His life.”
CALLING UPON THE LORD
All this is indeed wonderful, the wonder of wonders, that
Christ became a man, accomplished redemption for us,
became the Spirit, and has now entered into us to be our life
and everything to us; but the question we must now raise is
this: How can we touch and experience Christ in a practical
way as our very life moment by moment? The Lord has given
us a simple way. All we have to do is call upon Him, and we
will touch Him who is the life-giving supply. In Romans
10:12b-13 the Bible says, “For the same Lord is Lord of all and
rich to all who call upon Him; for ‘whoever calls upon the
name of the Lord shall be saved.’ ” In the past we may have
had the concept that these verses were only applicable to an
initial salvation experience; however, every Christian also
needs a daily salvation from sin, self, human weakness, and
other negative things. On the positive side he also needs a
bountiful supply of the Lord to nourish and strengthen him in
order that he may grow up into Christ in all things. The way
into the realization of this is simply by calling on the Lord. He
is rich to all who call upon Him. We see Paul in 2 Timothy
2:22 urging Timothy to live the Christian life with those who
call on the Lord out of a pure heart.
The Christian’s experience of Christ as purposed by God is
to be real to the believer and a testimony to those in the
world. What was the testimony of the early Christians? It was
this: they were a people who called on the name of the Lord.
We are shown this in Acts 9:14, which states that Paul before
his conversion was persecuting all those who called on the
Lord’s name. He was given authority from the chief priests to
bind all that call on His name. First Corinthians 1:2 reaf-
firms this by showing us that the early Christians were those
who in every place called upon the name of the Lord.
Many Christians today have begun to practice calling
upon the Lord daily, hourly, and moment by moment in a
simple, practical way. They have found to their joy that the
Lord is all they need and that they can touch and fellowship
A SIMPLE WAY TO TOUCH THE LORD 15
17. with Him at any time and in any circumstance just by calling
on Him from deep within. Our calling upon the Lord should
not be in an objective manner, calling on the Christ who
dwells in the heavens, but calling on the Christ who is the
Spirit and who dwells within our spirit (2 Tim. 4:22). By call-
ing upon Him from deep within, we will sense the flowing
and fellowship of Christ within us.
TRUE WORSHIP
“But an hour is coming, and it is now, when the true wor-
shippers will worship the Father in spirit and truthfulness,
for the Father also seeks such to worship Him. God is Spirit,
and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth-
fulness” (John 4:23-24). To every Christian this true worship
of fellowship is intended to be constant and life-giving. The
true worship in these verses is not participating in and keep-
ing certain rules, forms, rituals, and regulations, but rather
calling upon the Lord from deep within, contacting and
fellowshipping with Jesus Christ, the truth and the reality.
The desire of the Father for us is that we may enjoy and
participate in this true worship of touching and fellowship-
ping with His Son all day, every day. Whether on the job,
in the classroom, driving a car, talking to a friend, or in
meetings with other Christians, His desire is that we contact
and fellowship with our Lord.
Again we have to praise and thank the Lord that He has
not only told us that we must call upon Him, worshipping
Him in spirit and in truthfulness, but He has also given us a
very practical and simple way to touch Him in this true wor-
ship. The Bible gives us clear examples to show that we can
touch and experience the Lord in worship by simply calling
upon His name. In Matthew 8:2 we read, “And behold, a leper,
coming near, worshipped Him, saying, Lord.…” Then in
Matthew 15:25 we read, “But she came and worshipped Him,
saying, Lord.…”
These verses help us to see that we can participate in true
worship at any place, at any time, and in any situation. What-
ever our immediate circumstance may be, we can worship
Him simply by praying, “O Lord, O Lord.” Many Christians
16 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
18. are discovering that simply to breathe His name, “O Lord,”
when they are tempted or distressed or just “out of it” brings
them into a real touch and fellowship with the Lord and into
full deliverance from self, sin, and the world. When we cry in
this way to the Lord from deep within, we have a deep inner
sense of Christ and His life flowing and moving within us. In
the Psalms we find that as the psalmists prayed to the Lord
they cried “O Lord,” over one hundred eighty times. On one
occasion a psalmist said, “I cried with my whole heart; hear
me, O Lord” (Psa. 119:145). On another occasion one said,
“Then called I upon the name of the Lord; O Lord” (Psa.
116:4). Truly it is not a light thing to call upon the Lord, yet it
is so simple and practical. In this way we can daily, moment
by moment, touch and experience Christ as our inward satis-
faction and joy.
The Bible gives another example of true worship in Reve-
lation 19:4: “And the twenty-four elders and the four living
creatures fell down and worshipped God, who sits upon the
throne, saying, Amen, Hallelujah!” Second Corinthians 1:20
says, “For as many promises of God as there are, in Him is the
Yes; therefore also through Him is the Amen to God, for glory
through us to God.” And in Revelation 3:14 we find that
“Amen” is another name given to Christ. When we cry Amen
from deep within, we sense that we have touched Christ just
as when we called, “O Lord, O Lord,” because as His name is
Lord, so also is His name Amen. Then in 1 Chronicles 16:36
we see that our calling “Amen” is a real praise to the Lord:
“Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for ever and ever. And all
the people said, Amen, and praised the Lord.” For us to cry
“Amen” from deep within is to call on the Lord and to touch
Him.
Hallelujah means “praise ye the Lord,” that is, “praise ye
Jehovah,” and over and over again the psalmist used hallelu-
jah in his worship and praise to God. The last five Psalms
begin and end with this heavenly word of worship. We also
find this word offered in worship to God in Revelation 19:1, 3,
4, 6. Today it is still the same. We can worship and fellowship
with our Lord in the same simple way. All day we can cry, “O
Lord! Amen! Hallelujah!” from deep within.
A SIMPLE WAY TO TOUCH THE LORD 17
19. In summary, Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came to this
earth, lived a human life, was crucified for our sins, was
buried, rose again, and became the life-giving Spirit. When
we believed into Him, He as the Spirit came into our spirit,
the deepest part of our being, to be our life and everything to
us. Today, He as the Spirit is like the air to us—so fresh and
so available. When we cry “O Lord!” or “Amen!” or “Hallelu-
jah!” we take Him into us as the life-giving breath, supplying
us with all the riches of Himself. Today we need to breathe
these four words as our prayer and praise to God. From deep
within just breathe, “O Lord,” “Amen,” “Hallelujah,” and you
will taste the sweetness and reality of Christ Himself.
You will begin to realize more and more that His life is truly a
saving life. Today many Christians have found that they can
know Him, that they can be brought into the power of His
resurrection, that they can experience His spontaneous salva-
tion, and that they can walk in oneness with Him by calling
moment by moment, “O Lord! Amen! Hallelujah!”
18 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
20. CHAPTER THREE
DEEP CALLS UNTO DEEP
Scripture Reading: Psa. 42:7; Mark 4:5-6; Isa. 39:1-6; 2 Cor.
12:1-4; Acts 5:1-5
Psalm 42:7 says, “Deep calls unto deep.” Only a call from
the depths can provoke a response from the depths. Nothing
shallow can ever touch the depths, nor can anything superfi-
cial touch the inward parts. Only the deep will respond to the
deep. Anything that does not issue from the depths cannot
touch the depths. Others can respond deep within to only
what issues from deep within us. When we go to a certain
place and listen to a message, the only thing that touches us
is something that has issued from the depths of others. If
nothing comes from the depths, the help we receive is just
superficial. We have to see the importance of the depths. Any-
thing that is not from the depths will never reach the depths
of others. If we have never received help or benefit in our
depths, we will never have anything issuing from our depths.
If we want to render spiritual help to others, something must
issue from our depths. If we do not dig deep, we can never
gain others. Unless our utterance is from the depths, we will
not touch the depths in others, even though we gain their
emotions and thoughts and make them cry or be happy
or excited for a while. Only deep calls unto deep. Superficial
expressions will not touch the depths of others.
DEEP ROOTS
One principle in preaching and receiving the word is found
in the Lord’s parable of the sower. While the sower sowed,
some seeds fell beside the way, some on the rocky place, some
into the thorns, and some into the good earth. This shows us
21. four different ways for man to receive the word. The Lord
Jesus tells us that among these different conditions, one is
the rocky place. There is a little earth on the surface, but
underneath there are rocks. When the seed falls into this
kind of ground, it springs up quickly, but as soon as the sun
comes out, it withers because of the lack of root.
What is a root? It is growth that occurs beneath the soil.
What are the leaves? They are growth that occur above the
soil. In other words, roots are the hidden life, whereas leaves
are the manifest life. The trouble with many Christians is
that, while there is much apparent life, there is very little
secret life. In other words, there is the lack of a hidden life.
You have been a Christian for a number of years, have you
not? Then let me ask: How much of your life is hidden from
view? How much is unknown to others? You stress outward
works. Yes, good works are important; but apart from that
manifest expression of your life, how much of your life
remains hidden? If all your spiritual life is exposed, you do
not have any root. Are all your virtues before God manifested
before man, or is there something more that is unknown to
man? If all your experiences are manifested, then all your
growth is upward; there is no downward growth. If this is the
case, you are a person who has only leaves without root, and
you are on shallow ground.
In our Christian life it is necessary that we learn the
meaning of the Body of Christ; we must learn to have a life of
the Body. On the other hand, we must learn that the life given
to each member of His Body by the Lord is distinctly individ-
ual. The measure that has been given to you personally by
Him needs to be guarded; otherwise, it will lose its specific
character and will be of no particular use to God. If that
which has been specially committed to you is exposed, it will
wither.
The discourse of the Lord Jesus on the Mount was most
remarkable. On the one hand He said, “You are the light of
the world. It is impossible for a city situated upon a mountain
to be hidden” (Matt. 5:14). It is open. On the other hand He
said, “When you give alms, do not let your left hand know
what your right hand is doing, so that your alms may be in
20 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
22. secret;...when you pray, enter into your private room, and
shut your door and pray to your Father who is in secret”
(Matt. 6:3-4, 6). On the one hand, if you are a Christian, you
must come right out into the open and make a public profes-
sion; on the other hand, there are Christian virtues which you
should preserve from the public gaze. The Christian who
parades all his virtues before men and who does not have
anything in the depth of his being has no root; he will not
be able to stand in the day of trial and temptation.
We have been the Lord’s children many years; may the
Lord open our eyes and show us the extent to which our expe-
riences have been hidden from public view. How much would
be left if what is known by man was taken away? May God
work in us so that we can take root downward.
DEEP EXPERIENCES
Writing to the Corinthians, Paul said, “To boast is neces-
sary, though indeed not expedient” (2 Cor. 12:1). He admitted
that it was “not profitable” (Gk.) for himself to write what he
wrote in 2 Corinthians 12. But for the sake of others he had to
do it; he was obliged to speak of “visions and revelations of the
Lord.” Brothers and sisters, this should be our attitude also.
Many of us cannot stand the test of visions and revelations; as
soon as we have a little experience, we blow the trumpet, and
everyone knows about it. Paul knew that it was of no profit to
himself to mention the Lord’s visions and revelations. Why
then did he mention them? He was forced to do so because
some doubted his apostleship, and there were problems con-
cerning the foundation of the Christian faith.
Did Paul disclose all his revelations? Far from it. He wrote,
“I know a man [who is himself] in Christ, fourteen years ago
(whether in the body I do not know, or outside the body I do
not know; God knows) such a one was caught away to the
third heaven” (v. 2). He did not divulge this experience until
fourteen years later. What depth there was in Paul! It would
be a wonder if we could hide away something we received
from God for seven years. But for fourteen years Paul never
divulged his experience; for fourteen years God’s church knew
DEEP CALLS UNTO DEEP 21
23. nothing of it; for fourteen years not one of the apostles had
heard of it. Paul’s roots were deep beneath the soil.
Some people would be inclined to say, “Paul, let us hear all
about that experience of yours fourteen years ago. Tell
us about your experience in the third heavens. It would be
most helpful for us to know the whole story.” But he said, “I
know such a man (whether in the body or outside the body,
I do not know; God knows), that he was caught away into Par-
adise and heard unspeakable words, which it is not allowed
for a man to speak” (vv. 3-4). To this present day this experi-
ence of Paul’s has not been uprooted; still no one knows about
that experience.
Brothers and sisters, this matter of root is a matter of
extreme importance. If you want to have Paul’s work, then
you need to have Paul’s “root”; if you want to have Paul’s out-
ward conduct, then you need to have Paul’s inner life; if you
want to have Paul’s manifest power, then you need to have
Paul’s secret experience. The trouble with Christians today is
that they cannot keep any spiritual thing or any special expe-
rience undisclosed. As soon as they have a little experience,
they have to tell it abroad. They live their lives before men;
nothing is hidden within them. They do not have any root.
May God show us Paul’s experience, and may He lead us into
having depth!
SUPERFICIAL LIVING
In Isaiah 39 we are told that when the news of Hezekiah’s
sickness and recovery reached the Babylonian court, messen-
gers were dispatched with letters and a present for Hezekiah.
Hezekiah had been a recipient of the grace of God, but he was
unable to stand the test of grace. God’s Word says, “And Heze-
kiah was glad for them and showed them his treasury, the
silver and the gold, and the spices and the precious oil, and
his whole armory and everything which was found among his
treasures” (v. 2). Hezekiah could not overcome the temptation
to display everything. He had just been wonderfully healed of
his sickness and no doubt felt self-important and thought
there were few people in the world who had had such a
remarkable experience as he. After all, how many had been
22 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
24. given such a marvelous sign at the time of their healing as
the shadow on the dial of Ahaz going back ten degrees (Isa.
38:8, KJV)? In his elation Hezekiah displayed all his treasures.
This means that he had not passed through the dealing of the
cross. His natural life was not dealt with. It was apparent
that all his roots were exposed. Whatever Hezekiah knew and
whatever he had were known to the Babylonians. Because of
this exposure, Isaiah said to him, “Hear the word of Jehovah
of hosts: Behold, the days are coming when everything which
is in your house and which your fathers have laid up as a
treasure unto this day will be carried away to Babylon; noth-
ing will be left, says Jehovah” (39:5-6). The measure in which
we display things to others will be the measure of our own
loss. The measure in our life that we exhibit before others will
be the measure we give up in ourselves. This is a solemn
matter, and it demands our attention.
Alas, so many people cannot forbear disclosing their expe-
riences! They have to speak to their heart’s delight. This is
like Hezekiah opening up his treasures to others. A brother
once said, “Many of the brothers fall sick, and when they
recover, they give their testimonies. I wish I could develop
some sickness—but not a fatal one—and that God would heal
me; then I would have something to say at the next testimony
meeting.” This brother’s motive for healing was to be able to
give a testimony. He sought an experience in order to have
something to talk about. Oh! This superficial kind of living
brings grave loss to us; it rules out the possibility of spiritual
progress.
TESTIFYING WITHOUT EXHIBITING
Then should we not bear testimony? Yes, we should. Paul
did so, and multitudes of God’s children from generation to
generation have done so too. But bearing testimony is one
thing; delighting in exhibiting one’s experience is quite
another. What is our object in testifying? Is it that others may
profit or that we may have the pleasure of talking? The love
of hearing one’s own voice and the desire to be helpful to
others are two totally different things. We testify because
there is a problem, and we have to speak about it. A testimony
DEEP CALLS UNTO DEEP 23
25. is not an after meal conversation piece. Many times while we
gossip, spiritual riches leak away. When the Lord so leads, we
should testify because we want to render help to others. Paul
testified in 2 Corinthians 12, but he did not lightly disclose
his experience fourteen years earlier. He hid his experience
for fourteen years, and no one knew about it. Even when he
talked about this experience, he did not disclose everything.
He only mentioned the experience; he did not relate the whole
story. He only mentioned the fact that he received a revelation
and heard unspeakable words. He did not tell others the
words that he heard. Even today, the third heaven is still a
mystery, and we still do not know what it is like.
Brothers and sisters, what are our treasures? What are
our gold, silver, spices, precious ointments, and precious
things? What is our armory? We have to remember that gold
is everything that is of God and silver is anything that is
related to the redemption of the cross. Spices are the results
of our wounds, precious things are the things that relate to
the kingdom, and armory is the Lord’s work that we have
received from God and from the Lord. All these are not doc-
trines, biblical teachings, or theology. These are the things we
have acquired through our fellowship with the Lord. When
we fellowship with God, communicate with Him, and are
dealt with by Him, we pick up many things. It is wrong to
speak about them loosely. This does not mean that we should
not testify. But we must realize that many experiences need
to be hidden. Brothers and sisters, this is a crucial matter in
the Christian life. Many spiritual experiences need to be
hidden away and should not be exposed.
The Lord Jesus sometimes gave His testimony, but He was
never talkative. It is one thing to give a testimony and
another thing to be talkative. The Lord healed the sick and
insisted that the story of the healing be kept secret. This
charge is repeated again and again in the Gospel of Mark.
Once the Lord told a certain person, “Go to your house, to
your own people, and report to them what great things the
Lord has done for you, and how He has had mercy on you”
(5:19). We may speak of the great things the Lord has done for
us, but we must not publish these things abroad as items of
24 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
26. news; this only exposes ourselves as being without any root.
To be without root is to be without any treasure; it is to be
without any hidden life or hidden experiences. It is essential
that some of our experiences remain covered; to uncover
everything is to lose everything.
Let us also remember that if we display all our treasure,
captivity cannot be averted. Death and exposure go together,
and spiritual dryness and exposure also go together. Even if
we have to give a testimony, we must be like Paul, who
boasted out of necessity “though indeed not expedient” (2 Cor.
12:1). Satan’s attack often comes at the time a man is
exposed. Any kind of exposure opens us up to loss. Many
people are healed of their sickness, and they testify for the
glory of God. But many testimonies of healing are not for
the glory of God but for the glory of one’s own faith. As a
result, the sickness comes back. After these ones give their
testimony once, they are attacked by the same thing again.
This shows us that God covers those who cover their roots,
and God does not protect those who disclose their roots; they
will be exposed to attacks. If God wants us to testify, we still
have to do it. But there are many things that ought to be
hidden away. God protects what we hide before Him, and we
enjoy it.
The same applies to our work. By His grace and mercy
God has accomplished something through us, but remember
that what He has accomplished is not a matter for advertise-
ment or material for propaganda. If we expose the work of
God, we will find that the touch of death comes upon it imme-
diately; and the loss will correspond to the extent to which we
expose ourselves. As soon as David numbered the children of
Israel, death set in (2 Sam. 24). May God deliver us from this
kind of exposure.
Whatever secrets we have with the Lord must be pre-
served. We can only move according to God’s instruction
within us. Only if He moves within us to reveal something,
dare we reveal it. If He wants us to share some experience
with a brother, we dare not withhold it, for that would be vio-
lating a law of the members of the Body of Christ. One law of
the members of the Body of Christ is fellowship. Once we
DEEP CALLS UNTO DEEP 25
27. suppress this law, the flow stops. We must be positive, not
negative, and minister life to others. But if we are engrossed
all day with ourselves and with our own things, this talkative-
ness and exposure opens us to assault from the enemy. I trust
we shall learn what the Body of Christ is and what the flow
of life among the members is; but I trust we shall also learn
the need for safeguarding the hidden part we have before the
Lord, the experiences which are not known to others. No root
should be exposed.
As we extend ourselves deeper and take root downward,
we will discover that “deep calls unto deep.” When we can
bring forth riches from the depths of our inner life, we will
find that other lives will be deeply affected. The minute our
inner being is touched, others will receive help and be enlight-
ened. They will know that there is something beyond their
knowledge. When deep touches deep, deep will respond
to deep. If our life has no depth, our superficial work will only
affect other lives superficially. We repeat yet again—only
“deep calls unto deep.”
26 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
28. ABOUT TWO SERVANTS OF THE LORD
We thank the Lord that the ministry of Watchman Nee
and his co-worker Witness Lee to the Body of Christ has been
a blessing to the Lord’s children on all of the continents on
the earth for more than 80 years. Their writings have been
translated into many languages. Our readers have asked us
many questions about Watchman Nee and Witness Lee. In
answer to their questions we present this brief sketch of the
life and work of these two brothers.
Watchman Nee
Watchman Nee received Christ at the age of seventeen.
His ministry is well known among seeking believers all over
the world. Many have received help from his writings con-
cerning the spiritual life and the relationship between Christ
and His believers. However, not many people know about
another equally crucial aspect of his ministry, which stressed
the practice of the church life and the building up of the Body
of Christ. Brother Nee wrote many books concerning both the
Christian life and the church life. Until the end of his life
Watchman Nee was a gift given by the Lord for the unveiling
of the revelation in God’s Word. After suffering twenty years
in prison for the Lord in mainland China, he died in 1972 as a
faithful witness of Jesus Christ.
Witness Lee
Witness Lee was the closest and most trusted co-worker of
Watchman Nee. In 1925, at the age of nineteen, he experi-
enced a dynamic spiritual regeneration and consecrated
himself to the living God in order to serve Him. From that
29. time he began to study the Bible intensively. During the first
seven years of his Christian life he was greatly influenced by
the Plymouth Brethren. Then he met Watchman Nee, and for
the next 17 years, until 1949, he was a co-worker of Brother
Nee in China. During the Second World War, when China was
occupied by Japan, he was imprisoned by the Japanese and
suffered for his faithful service to the Lord. The ministry and
work of these two servants of God brought in a great revival
among the Christians in China, which resulted in the spread-
ing of the gospel throughout the country and in the building
up of hundreds of churches.
In 1949 Watchman Nee called together all his co-workers
who were serving the Lord in China and commissioned Wit-
ness Lee to continue the ministry outside the mainland, on
the island of Taiwan. During the following years, due to the
blessing of God in Taiwan and in Southeast Asia, more than
one hundred churches were established.
In the early 1960s Witness Lee was led by the Lord to
move to the U.S.A., where he ministered and worked for the
benefit of the Lord’s children for more than 35 years. He lived
in the city of Anaheim, California, from 1974 until he went to
be with the Lord in June 1997. Through the years of his work
in the U.S.A. he published more than 300 books.
The ministry of Witness Lee is especially helpful to seek-
ing Christians who desire a deeper knowledge and experience
of the unsearchable riches of Christ. By opening the divine
revelation in the entire Scriptures, Brother Lee’s ministry
reveals to us how to know Christ for the building up of the
church, which is His Body, the fullness of the One who fills all
in all. All the believers should participate in this ministry of
building up the Body of Christ so that the Body can build
itself up in love. Only the accomplishing of this building can
fulfill the Lord’s purpose and satisfy His heart.
The main characteristic of the ministry of these two broth-
ers is that they taught the truth according to the pure word of
the Bible.
The following is a brief description of the major beliefs of
Watchman Nee and Witness Lee:
28 BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
30. 1. The Holy Bible is the complete divine revelation, infal-
lible and God-breathed, verbally inspired by the Holy Spirit.
2. God is the only one Triune God—the Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit—equally co-existing and mutually
coinhering from eternity to eternity.
3. The Son of God, even God Himself, was incarnated to be
a man by the name of Jesus, born of the virgin Mary, that He
might be our Redeemer and Savior.
4. Jesus, a genuine Man, lived on the earth for thirty-
three and a half years to make God the Father known to men.
5. Jesus, the Christ anointed by God with His Holy Spirit,
died on the cross for our sins and shed His blood for the
accomplishing of our redemption.
6. Jesus Christ, after being buried for three days, was
raised from the dead, and forty days later He ascended into
heaven, where God made Him the Lord of all.
7. After His ascension Christ poured out the Spirit of God
to baptize His chosen members into one Body. Today this
Spirit moves on the earth to convict sinners, to regenerate
God’s chosen people by imparting into them the divine life, to
dwell in the believers of Christ for their growth in life, and to
build up the Body of Christ for His full expression.
8. At the end of this age Christ will come back to take up
His believers, to judge the world, to take possession of the
earth, and to establish His eternal Kingdom.
9. The overcoming saints will reign with Christ in the mil-
lennium, and all the believers in Christ will participate in the
divine blessings in the New Jerusalem in the new heaven and
the new earth for eternity.
ABOUT TWO SERVANTS OF THE LORD 29
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