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Home » Archives for Paula Wiseman » Page 67

Intercession: Burden

By Paula Wiseman

intercession burden title graphic

Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died, and furthermore is also risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for us. Romans 8:34 (NKJV)

Intercession is intervening

More specifically, intercession is going to God on someone’s behalf. In the Old Testament, the priests did this. It was an exhausting, messy business. Think about it. The priests handled the sacrifices for the people. It was physical. It was bloody and messy, but it was critically necessary.

As New Testament believers, we are priests (1 Peter 2:9, Rev 5:10). We have access to God through Jesus Christ, but rather than enter the Holy Place in the tabernacle or Temple, we enter God’s presence through prayer. It a holy privilege and duty, not to be taken lightly. But it is no less strenuous and sometimes no less messy.

Over the next few weeks we’re going to look at some intercessory prayers in Scripture to learn from them. Let’s start with Nehemiah.

Nehemiah had a tremendous BURDEN for his countrymen. A burden for others and their situations is essential to intercession. We will not pray without one.

Late in the year 446 BC, Nehemiah was in the winter palace of the Persian kings, where he served Artaxerxes as cupbearer. His brother, Hanani, visited with some men who had just returned from Jerusalem. They had gone with Ezra in 458 BC in the second return.

He asked about the Jews who had returned with them. How were they doing? How were things going? A burden for others will show in concern for their well-being.

They told Nehemiah that the people lived in a burned out broken down city. They were enduring the insults and oppression of the locals and it was making life miserable for them.

Nehemiah was overwhelmed with grief, weeping and mourning for days over the news. A burden for others makes us tender-hearted toward them.

In his mourning, Nehemiah prayed and fasted for the Jews in his homeland. It was a serious concern that consumed his attention to the point that he didn’t eat.

Here’s what he prayed:

Nehemiah 1:5 And I said: “I pray, LORD God of heaven, O great and awesome God, You who keep Your covenant and mercy with those who love You and observe Your commandments,”

Nehemiah is humble, not making demands. He appeals to God on the basis of God’s character, not his own.

Nehemiah 1:7 “We have acted very corruptly against You, and have not kept the commandments, the statutes, nor the ordinances which You commanded Your servant Moses.“

Again, a humble confession that God owes us nothing, because we are sinful and rebellious.

Nehemiah 1:10-11 “Now these are Your servants and Your people, whom You have redeemed by Your great power, and by Your strong hand. O Lord, I pray, please let Your ear be attentive to the prayer of Your servant, and to the prayer of Your servants who desire to fear Your name; and let Your servant prosper this day, I pray, and grant him mercy in the sight of this man.“

But we have a standing because He has called us His people. Then Nehemiah makes his two requests. 1. Hear my pray and the prayer of others. 2. Grant him mercy in the sight of the king.

Those requests also teach us something important about intercession. Nehemiah had enlisted others to pray with him and for him. Paul tells us to bear one another’s burdens. Intercessory prayer is a way we do this.

Second, Nehemiah was resolved to act. We must be willing and prepared to act on behalf of others if we intercede for them.

If you keep reading in Nehemiah chapter 2, you’ll see it was four months before Nehemiah approached the king. His desire act was subject to God’s sovereign timing. In the intervening time, I’m sure there was more fasting, more praying. With Nehemiah’s great burden for his people and their situation how could he do any less?

Who are you burdened for? How are you interceding for them?

Filed Under: Thursday in the Word Tagged With: how to pray, Intercession series, Nehemiah

Not All the Blood of Beasts

By Paula Wiseman

Not all the blood of beasts title graphic

Not all the blood of beasts
on Jewish altars slain,
could give the guilty conscience peace,
or wash away the stain.

But Christ, the heav’nly Lamb,
takes all our sins away,
a sacrifice of nobler name
and richer blood than they.

My faith would lay her hand
on that dear head of thine,
while like a penitent I stand,
and there confess my sin.

My soul looks back to see
the burdens thou didst bear,
when hanging on the cursed tree,
and knows her guilt was there.

Believing, we rejoice
to see the curse remove;
we bless the Lamb with cheerful voice,
and sing his bleeding love.

Isaac Watts, 1709
Read Hebrews 9:11-15

(This was originally published with the title “Faith in Christ Our Sacrifice.” And that is where all of our faith lies. If the sacrifice of Christ was not sufficient, we have no other hope. There is no other system or method we can turn to. Thanks be to God, the sinless sacrifice of Jesus covers even my sins.)


Read other posts on hymns

Filed Under: Wednesday Worship Tagged With: hymns

Doctrinal Definitions: Glorification

By Paula Wiseman

doctrinal definitions glorification title graphic

The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs—heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him in order that we may also be glorified with him. Romans 8:16-17

This is the end of the process.
What began with salvation ends with glorification.
We cannot have one without the other.

It’s not seeking to glorify ourselves.
That is boastful pride.
And it has no place in the kingdom.

People were created in the image of God.
We originally shared the glory of our Creator.
Through Christ, God will restore what we forfeited.

It is that great glory that Jesus promised he would share with us. (John 17:22)
The glory at the Transfiguration.
Shared. With. Us.

Who is “us”?
The genuine believers in Christ.
The Spirit attests that we are, in fact, believers.

But there is more evidence.
Suffering. Persecution. Opposition.
The promise of glorification, though, gets us through.

And God keeps His promises.


Read the rest of the Doctrinal Definitions series

Filed Under: Monday Meditations Tagged With: Doctrinal Definitions series, Romans

Doctrinal Definitions: Transformation

By Paula Wiseman

doctrinal definitions transformation title graphic

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. Romans 12:2 (ESV)

Transformation is changed from the inside out.
Paul tells us the strategy for accomplishing it:
The renewing of our minds.

Making our minds new.
New thoughts. New attitudes.
New approaches. New goals.

The will of God does not conform to the world.
The good does not conform to the world.
The acceptable does not conform to the world.
The perfect does not conform to the world.

If we want to figure out God’s will,
If we want to be, to pursue the good, the acceptable and the perfect.
We need transformation.

The Holy Spirit’s power
Proves to us and the rest of the world
That salvation changes everything about us.

Are you being transformed?


Read the rest of the Doctrinal Definitions series

Filed Under: Monday Meditations Tagged With: Doctrinal Definitions series, Romans

Doctrinal Definitions: Sanctification

By Paula Wiseman

Doctrinal Definitions Sanctification title graphic

But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the fruit you get leads to sanctification and its end, eternal life. Romans 6:22 (ESV)

What is sanctification?
It’s not some secret thing reserved for a select few.

It is the fact and the process by which believers are set apart
By God
From the world
To be conformed to Christ
According to His purposes.

We pursue sanctification (or we should),
But the Holy Spirit accomplishes it.

W. E. Vine says it is “an individual possession,
Built up little by little,
As a result of obedience to the Word of God
And of following the example of Christ.”

It is God’s will for us (1 Thessalonians 4:3).
It should be our fervent pursuit (Hebrews 12:14).

You are sanctified. You are being sanctified.
One day you will be ultimately and utterly sanctified.


Read others in the series; Doctrinal Definitions

Filed Under: Monday Meditations Tagged With: 1 Thessalonians, Doctrinal Definitions series, Hebrews, Romans

Down the Sacred Wave

By Paula Wiseman

sacred wave wednesday worship title block

Down to the sacred wave
The Lord of Life was led;
And He who came our souls to save
In Jordan bowed His head.

He taught the solemn way;
He fixed the holy rite;
He bade His ransomed ones obey,
And keep the path of light.

Blest Saviour, we will tread
In Thy appointed way.
Let glory o’er these scenes be shed,
And smile on us today.

Samuel Smith, 1843
Read Philippians 2:5-11

(Down the Sacred Wave is a short hymn that simply communicates how Christ set His deity aside to come and live as man. He not only saved us but He left us a pattern. A few years ago, WWJD became a catchword. It is unfortunate that it was reduced to a slogan because constantly checking ourselves against the standard of Jesus is a wise way to live. May God help us measure up.)


O Sacred Head, Now Wounded

Filed Under: Wednesday Worship Tagged With: hymns

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