ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: APHIEMI HEALING, Part 33
June 6, 2014
Ever have the Lord spring surprises on you? Ever have Him
provide unusual favor in circumstances where it might not be likely? Well,
sometimes it's just really cool to see God perform quickly and in unusual ways
to our requests. That's not to take away from the fact that we should
automatically come boldly before the Throne of God and expect Him to respond
with love, with favor and as our Father.
Still, there is no question that He has a sense of exquisite
timing! Our grandson, P.J., participated in some school trips provided through
a grant program to qualifying high school students for the purpose of teaching
them marketing skills. Part of the qualification, apart from maintaining a high
grade level, was to earn the expense money for the trip through the selling of
various things -- mostly door-to-door.
For his first trip, P.J. got out and really hustled, easily
generating a sufficient amount of money for that event. Unfortunately the
amount of time between trips 1 and 2 didn't permit him to generate enough funds
for the second trip. Although he was able to raise a portion of the funds, it
was clear that he wasn't going to have enough so I called the administrator of
the program to see if there was some grant money that could be used to make up
the difference. The administrator said that, in view of P.J.'s efforts, his
good grades, etc., they would provide the needed funds.
P.J. came back from that trip on a real high feeling that it had
been extremely profitable from every standpoint. You can imagine his shock a
few weeks later when the administrator presented him with a bill for $580,
telling him that he would not get his grades released for the year until the
bill was paid. All of a sudden he felt like he'd been betrayed. It put him into
a tailspin that resulted in a lack of incentive and subsequent failing grades
for much of this past quarter.
Della and I brought P.J. to Sunnyside at the request of his
mother and enrolled him in Sunnyside High. To make a long story short, I sent a
letter to the administrator of the program after discovering that the former
administrator was a temporary fill-in for the actual administrator, and that
she had acted in violation of the program's strict policies. Yesterday, I
received a reply in which the actual administrator acknowledged the blunder and
erased the debt against P.J. For P.J., this was nothing short of a miracle and
it was a demonstration of Father's love and favor.
For Della and me, it was almost humorous in watching God move so
quickly for P.J. By the way, in the five weeks that P.J. has been here, we've
seen a massive turnaround in his attitude, his efforts, his mindset, and his
grades! Praise God!
One of
the issues I've addressed repeatedly throughout the years is the issue of
passivity on the part of many "believers." This passivity is a
disease that has infected the body of Christ for generations. With the
exception of a precious few until perhaps the last two decades (when we have
seen an awakening taking place) believers have pretty much accepted a perverse
doctrine of unworthiness, believing that they need to approach the Throne of
God gingerly. It is a doctrine rooted in the Fear of Evil.
Somewhere
along the line, Paul's admonition to the body of Christ in his general letter
to the Hebrews has gotten lost.
"Inasmuch then as we
have a great High Priest Who has [already] ascended and passed through
the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast (krateo) our confession (homologia) [of faith in Him].
"For we do not have
a High Priest Who is unable to understand and sympathize and have
a shared feeling with our weaknesses and infirmities and
liability to the assaults of temptation, but One Who has been tempted in every
respect as we are, yet without sinning.
"Let us then
fearlessly and confidently and boldly draw near to the throne of
grace (the throne of God’s unmerited favor to us sinners), that we may receive
mercy [for our failures] and find grace to help in good time for every need
[appropriate help and well-timed help, coming just when we need it]." (Hebrews 4:14-16, Amplified Bible)
I've
underlined two critical portions of this instruction. The first part in verse
14 is illustrated in the word, confession. (The KJV uses the word, profession.)
This word comes from the Greek, homologeo (or homologia), and it means: to say
the same thing as, to agree with. Beyond the literal translation from
the Greek word(s) this comes from a legal concept which is predicated in both
the Greek and Hebrew Law. Homologeo is somewhat akin
to testifying in a court of law under oath, with legal consequences for
testifying falsely.
Before
we continue on to the next example, let's re-amplify this verse from the Greek:
"Inasmuch
then as we have a great and mighty High Priest Who has [already] ascended and
passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us seize and retain our
place of public and outspoken agreement with Him.
(Hebrews 4:14,
RAC Amplification)
Now,
look at verse 16 with some slightly different amplification:
"Accordingly,
let us boldly, frankly and bluntly with complete assurance approach the throne
of favor and liberality, that we may receive His justice [and setting things in
proper order] and find compassion to help in a timely manner for every need." (RAC Amplification)
The
pictures that Paul draws here are nothing short of spectacular. Nothing -- and
I do mean, NOTHING! -- in what He writes suggests or implies in any way that we
need to come in fear and trembling before the Lord in our time of necessity.
Everything he writes frames our position before Father God as family.
In
any normal family, when children come to their father with a need or a desire,
do they shake and tremble fearfully when they ask him for something, or do they
ask matter-of-factly? If my kids (and they are all grown adults, most of them
with children of their own) ask me for something, they think nothing of calling
me and saying, "Dad, do you have (such and such), and can I get that from
you?"
Why don't my children come with fear and timidity to ask something of me? Because they know that I love them, and that if I have it and it is in my power to help, they will have it. The same thing applies in our relationship with Father God. We have a love-relationship with Him! Does Jesus have a problem presenting His needs or desires to Father?
Does He have an qualms about presenting our need
for healing, or deliverance, or material needs to Father?
The
obvious and almost foolish answer to these questions is a loud and emphatic,
NO! He is the only begotten and "firstborn among many sons" (see
Hebrews 2:10) among whom we count ourselves! If, therefore, we are also sons of
God, heirs and joint-heirs with Jesus Christ (Romans 8:17), why is it that so
many Christians have this issue about coming boldly before Father with our
needs and requirements?
I
can't think back to a single time in my 72-plus years when anyone has ever
described me as "timid." OK! You can laugh, if you like, but there
was never a time in my growing-up years when, if I had a need of something, or
even a desire for something, that I had a second thought about asking my father
or mother for it. When you grow up as a missionary's kid in arctic villages or
communities, your needs and desires are somewhat shaped by the environment in
which you live, but that didn't mean I didn't dream of having some of the
things that I saw in the Sears & Roebuck catalogs or the Montgomery Ward
catalogs.
Living in Nome, Alaska for the first nine years of our Alaskan adventures was a very different life than we were about to experience in the much-farther north, but Nome in the 1940's and early 1950's was still pretty much frontier living by any standard of measurement. Seeing a bicycle in the Sears & Roebuck catalog as a youngster became an instant desire. I showed my father a picture of the bicycle I wanted to have and asked him if he would buy it for me.
Naturally, my brother was going to have to get one as well (smile), but because
he was younger he could do with a tricycle for the time being!
The bicycle would have to come from Seattle. That meant it would be shipped disassembled and come by air. I would have to wait for it, and I would have to wait until Dad had the money to buy it, but the immediate answer was, "Yes!" Dad did one other thing with me and that was to make certain that I presented my request for a bicycle to the Lord.
After all, Dad didn't have
the money at the time, and if he was going to buy me a bicycle, the provision
for the money would have to come from the Lord. So we presented the request to
the Lord. No begging! No whining! No, "please, please, please can I have
this?" Just a simple request presented in the confidence that my request
was heard and responded to.
The
wait would probably turn into at least a couple of months or more, but from the
time I asked and Dad answered, it was settled! Just because the bicycle hadn't
shown up yet didn't mean I didn't have it. From the moment I asked and Dad said
he would do what he could to get it for me, I had my bicycle.
I
could see that bicycle. I could envision myself riding that bicycle (and that
would be a trick on the muddy streets of Nome, Alaska in 1949) but it was a
settled fact for me from the moment I asked that the bicycle was mine and in my
possession. It didn't matter that it might be three months before it was in my
hands and I was actually able to ride it, that bike became mine!
Are
you seeing the picture? The confidence that my father built in me was one he
applied to our relationship with Father God. It was the way I grew up. My
relationship with Father God was framed exactly like my relationship with my
Dad. As the years have gone by since, it has become more and more clear that
this Father-son relationship between a huge number of believers has been
missing. The fact that our society has so contaminated the father-son or
father-daughter connection with mother-only families in which the father is
either absent, or has never been there, that it transitioned into the spiritual
relationships of many, many folks when they come to Jesus Christ. There has
never been a father-son or father-daughter model in their lives.
There
are, of course, many other factors that play into this. Homosexual and lesbian
liaisons which have been becoming more and more apparent as this age grows
darker and darker worsen things for children who grow up with these perverted
pictures.
We
could talk about the role that divorce plays in distorting our image of Father
God; we could talk about the problems that drugs and alcohol bring; there are a
host of other things that interfere with our image of God as a loving Father.
The point I'm making is that no matter what contaminated image of a father
folks have struggled with, the Word makes abundantly clear who we are in
Christ, and what He is in us!
We
absolutely MUST overcome any place of timidity, fear, caution or drawing back
when we come to Father. This applies all the more when we consider what Jesus
paid for on our behalf, why He paid for it all, what His purpose is, the fact
that we are His inheritance, and the fact that this term, aphiémi, speaks to our sins, past,
present and future, the needs of our physical bodies, healing, as well as
deliverance from Satan's holds and attachments to us.
If
I haven't hammered it enough in this series or emphasized it enough, then here
it is again! Aphiémi
is eradication. Aphiémi
is the complete wiping out of existence those things which have been held
against us. Aphiémi
is analogous to getting into a time machine and going back to a time before
those things occurred which could be constituted as worthy of condemnation,
judgment and execution.
Let's
talk for just a minute about the time aspect of this word. First, consider the
necessity of this in its more modern concept of "forgiveness" or
"remission." Forgiveness and remission are essential for us when it
comes to eternity, and that's because of the Law of Sin and Death. Most folks
think of the Law within the framework of the Law of Moses, but the Law of Sin
and Death came into existence with Adam's partaking of the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil.
The
Law of Moses spelled out some of the details of the Law of Sin and Death, but
the apostle Paul describes things like this.
Romans 4:15:
"Because the law worketh wrath:
for where no law is, there is no transgression."
Here's
my amplification of that statement from the Greek: Therefore, the Law fashions ire and justifiable abhorrence (of
actions which violate it): for where there is no law, there can be no violation
or act considered to be contrary.
Romans 7:9-11:
"For I was alive without the law once: but when the
commandment came, sin revived, and I died. And the commandment, which was
ordained to life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion
by the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me."
And
here is my amplification of the Greek for this passage: In time past, apart from the existence of the Law, I was alive
[and knew how to live]: but when [I became aware that] legal injunctions were
instituted, offenses were suddenly restored, and I began to die. That same
command and injunction, which was the very life and breath of God and designed
to bring life [to me], I quickly perceived and found to be to my death. The
erroneous acts which I had committed or participated in took advantage of my
ignorance of the commands and injunctions of the Law, seduced and deceived me
and used the Law to destroy me.
Are
you seeing the picture? If there is no law or commandment to apply to you or
your actions, then no legal consequence of your actions can be instituted. You
cannot be found guilty of breaking a law that doesn't exist.
When
Adam ate of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, he brought death into
the human genome and he caused mankind to become subject to Satan, along with
the Law of Sin and Death, and the curse that accompanied Satan. The Law of
Moses codified a set of rules for behavior that, if adhered to and followed,
would realign men and women with God, and with each other. However, the Law of
Moses did not eradicate the now-defined sin or errors, and it did not eradicate
the curse. Neither did it provide for the remission (or total erasure from
existence) of sin.
When
Jesus shed His blood, died on the Cross taking all sin and the curse with Him
and deposited it at Satan's feet in Hell, and then rose from the dead, He
provided a corresponding legal basis for our freedom from the Law of Sin and
Death, the curse (and all sickness, disease, infirmity and poverty that
accompanies the curse), and provided a means for us to go back in time --
legally -- so that no sin with its death consequences could be ascribed to and
required of us.
The
word Holy Spirit chose from the Greek to describe this legal move by the Lord
Jesus Christ is aphiémi!
Let's be clear about this, however. This is the legal status ONLY for those who
are IN CHRIST JESUS. Once we have accepted, acknowledged and confessed that
Jesus Christ IS our Messiah, our Redeemer, our King of Kings and Lord of Lords,
and begin to live and walk in the life to which He has called us, even when we
do blow it, sin cannot be ascribed or "imputed" to us with the
consequences proscribed by the Law of Sin and Death.
Here's
how John puts it in his first general letter to the body of Christ (See I John
2:1-2).
"My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye
sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate [one who represents us] with
[and before] the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: And he is the propitiation
[coverer and eradicator] for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the
sins of the whole world."
This 64-dollar word, propitiation, describes one who stands in on our behalf and says to Father, "It's OK, Father!
They're in me, and I'm walking them
through this. They're covered and taken care of by the shedding of my blood and
the stripes I took on their behalf." And THAT, my friends, is why we can
come boldly before the Throne of Grace!
That's
not to say we may not have consequences in this life for our actions. There IS
a law of sowing and reaping that we may have to deal with, but as far as
eternity is concerned, Jesus is our eternal life!
Gotta run. See you next
week.
Again, if you are in need of healing -- especially if you have
some terminal disease or prognosis of a very short time to live from the
doctors -- please join our prayer conference calls on either Monday or
Wednesday of each week at 7:00 PM Eastern. Once again, the number to call is (805) 399-1000.
Then enter the access code: 124763#. To get into the queue for
prayer, when Randy opens the call up for everyone, hit *6-1 on your keypad. Let
us minister to your need for healing!
Blessings
on you!
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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