God is Creative in the Weak!
October 8, 2009 by Mike Wells
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The fearful person is the perfect person in whom God can be creative.
Mark 2:22, No one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is lost and the skins as well; but one puts new wine into fresh wineskins.
God can only do something creative through a weak, unknowing person. Familiarity with a job encourages doing it the same way and not, in humility, seeking Him for His way. For example, a person with 50 years’ successful experience with missions, teaching, or church building will not, generally speaking, seek the Father for how He wants things done in a new place. It will be done the same way, without thought, and the person will find himself in a rut. The problem with many churches is that they either stay in a rut or go examine other people’s ruts instead of going to the Lord and discovering whether there is something new that He would do. I meet many people fearful to take up the call of God. They don’t know how to preach, they don’t know how to lead, and they don’t know enough about the topic. But here is a secret: water cannot be put in a full cup; new wine cannot be put in an old wineskin. The fearful person is the perfect person in whom God can be creative. If you can’t do something, admit it, and let Him do something new. This message of Christ in you is old, and yet with each generation God would make it fresh. In your weakness, allow Him to do just that, make it fresh.
Should a Christian Listen to the Music or Read the Book of a Believer that has Fallen?
October 8, 2009 by Mike Wells
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In the grace of God, we see him rise from the ashes with a new message, THE message of Christ.
To me this question actually has two answers. First, our responsibility is to judge the message, for it always takes precedence over the messenger. Paul makes this point repeatedly, such as in Galatians 1:8, saying no matter how beautiful the messenger is, the message is what counts. “But even if we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary to what we have preached to you, he is to be accursed!” Again, Paul sees the message as being much more important than himself, “What then is Apollos? And what is Paul? Servants through whom you believed, even as the Lord gave opportunity to each one.” Even when it came to having a messenger who had wrong motives, Paul remained interested primarily in the message. Philippians 1:17, 18, “the former proclaim Christ out of selfish ambition rather than from pure motives, thinking to cause me distress in my imprisonment. 18What then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed; and in this I rejoice.” Therefore, if the message was correct when the writer or performer was walking with Jesus, the message is still valid today, and I won’t throw it out. David had a moral failure; I will not throw out what God had clearly given him before his failure. It would be my loss. When one takes the position to discredit everything that has been said by a fallen believer, he is walking on thin ice, for God may define for him anew what fallen means. In, Galatians 5:19-21, Paul gives a description of the flesh. Who can boast that at some time in their life they have not fallen into some of these things? Who can rightly judge the messenger? Now to the second answer:
some have not promoted the message, but rather they promote themselves. It is their plan that whenever we hear their music or read a particular paragraph, their picture, not Christ’s, flashes into our minds. Paul talks about such people. II Cor. 4:5, “For we do not preach ourselves but Christ Jesus as Lord, and ourselves as your bond-servants for Jesus’ sake. 6For God, who said, ‘Light shall shine out of darkness,’ is the One who has shone in our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ.” There are those in the business of riding on the back of Christ to create an image for themselves. They don’t make a distinction between the message and themselves. They are the proof of their message. They, in fact, believe they are propping up Jesus. The focus is constantly on them and their faith, their talent, and their cleverness. Their formula, writing, or music and how it makes them stand out is one with their image. “17For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel, not in cleverness of speech, so that the cross of Christ would not be made void.” When such a believer falls, it is impossible to separate him from his message, for in reality he was the true message, with such a high standard set for himself and others that he will have trouble finding grace. Such a one is left having to clean up the mess on his own. In interview after interview he will try to separate himself from the message, so that the message can retain its integrity, but it is too late to separate himself from it. It becomes impossible to defend his message when it is revealed that it wasn’t THE message of Christ. People quickly abandon him. The books and the music will find their way to the trash bin, but though his reputation is also in the trash bin, the person is not! The blessing in all this is that God will use it to move him into clinging to the proper message. In the grace of God, we see him rise from the ashes with a new message, THE message of Christ. Well, amen!
The Company of the Unknowns
October 8, 2009 by Mike Wells
Filed under Articles by Mike Wells
“Now as they observed the confidence of Peter and John, and understood that they were uneducated and untrained men, they were marveling, and {began} to recognize them as having been with Jesus.” Acts 4:13
Are we happy to be in the company of the Unknowns? To go into the ministry of the unknown, ministering to the Unknowns? This is the true ministry of faith. He came, God in Man, unknown! He didn’t attempt to make Himself known, He wanted the Father to be known. Divine humility! Amazing! We too are to be unknown. We are making Him known.
Why are we unknown? Being unknown keeps us safe. Being unknown will keep the elect from kingdom building, self-righteousness, glory, and image. All these things must be broken at His feet. It is the kind of wealth that we don’t need and belong to Him. We must lose everything to discover the power of the life within. It is crucial that we are unknowns. Amazingly, we are entrusted with the greatest message and kingdom and no one wants to know us! We represent Him, we have direct access to Him, and no one wants to know us. We will judge angels and no one wants to know us.
A ministry of the Unknowns, a company of the Unknowns, all with the same vision to remain attached to the life of the vine, the life of the vine to flow out of the Unknowns. We are all one, yet all different; all tapped into the same life, not branch to a branch but a branch to the vine. The ministry of the Unknowns is a WITH ministry. Unknowns band together. Unknowns are not recognized. We work without recognition.
This world’s system is not an accident. It is all permitted. It is all in the plan of God. It is all there for a purpose: the breaking of kingdoms, righteousness, pride, strength, glory. It is all in the plan of God. Permitted. It is, well, nice, that He is using man’s stupidity. It all works to His end. Nothing is bad. This is the best possible life. How do we judge that things are good or bad? The soulish judge them on the basis of their outer life, their soul life. The soulish don’t like their outer life broken. They fight against being Unknown. However, everything must go that hinders the release of the life in me. Nothing is bad that accomplishes that. Being Unknown accomplishes that, and remember, we are known by Him!
Abiding Life People
October 8, 2009 by Mike Wells
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“But thanks be to God, who always leads us in His triumph in Christ, and manifests through us the sweet aroma of the knowledge of Him in every place.” 2Cor. 2:14
In the Rocky Mountains, we have what is called the high country. It is my favorite place. As you ascend, you can experience what appears to be a perpetual springtime. Beautiful! In late summer, in the high country, I find the berry bushes and the wild strawberries. They have not been tampered with, and therefore, are very small, small in appearance but grand in flavor. They are not like the huge grocery store berries. Huge but no flavor, small and powerful.
Abiding life people are like the berries at high altitude. Small but a fragrant aroma! The berries are hard to get to because of the bushes and thorns. Attempt to eat them and you will be scratched. Is it worth it? You decide. It is to me. There are many fruits that are bigger but not tastier. Eat one of these berries and you cannot get the small seeds out of your mouth. They have a tendency to stick there. Spit out the seed and there will be growth. In many places I have seen the message of abiding in Christ spit out, only to grow years later. The seed of abiding is so resilient. The fruit so poignant. Let the years speak against the minutes. We are the lesser people in this great time, the abiding people, the berry of high altitude, the aroma of the world.
Too Easy on Sin?
October 8, 2009 by Mike Wells
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“Do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, nor faint when you are reproved by Him.” Heb. 12:5 “But when we are judged, we are disciplined by the Lord in order that we may not be condemned along with the world.” 1Cor11:32
Often after finishing the first few lectures in the Abiding Life seminar, I will be questioned as to whether I am not being too easy on sin. There is an interesting fear among many that unbelievers and believers may think that they are in some way going to get away with sin. They would like to hear me stress that God is going to judge them. However, there are inherent, biblical problems with emphasizing judgment. First, our sin judges us on the spot. Because we are held together by Christ, to invite something that is anti-Christ into our being is to invite immediate judgment; it is too late to warn people after they have sinned, for judgment comes with the sin.
Second, if any believe that the Abiding Life message is easy on sin, then we ask you to look to the cross. God is not easy on sin. His Son died because of sin. The popular term “cheap grace” must never be uttered. Grace is not cheap; it cost the Son. God is not easy on sin or man’s inner life that sins, for He crucified it. The cross proclaims to all that God is concerned with sin. To say that we need His life is an acknowledgment of our concern. I won’t listen to that accusation.
Third, the statement, “People must know that God will judge their sin,” is a statement of unbelief. God has already judged all men in Christ. To wait around for judgment is to wait for something that has already happened. “But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him” (Rom. 5:8,9.)” . . . that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them ..” (2 Cor. 5:19)
Fourth, the person who worries about sin’s not being preached has forgotten he came to Christ through the good news being preached. All men have sinned and have recognition of that fact. The idea that people are sinning because they are ignorant is not plausible. A woman recently related to me that once she and her boyfriend were converted, they “knew” without anyone telling them that they were sinning living together. Again, God did judge sin in the form of Jesus Christ, and because of this judgment we have received grace and mercy. Therefore, grace and mercy is our message.


