Thursday, May 1, 2014
Breakthrough - Gimellin Godstime
How to Unleash God’s Power of Breakthrough in Your Life
Are you facing a difficult, or even an impossible, situation right now? Perhaps you are facing a major barrier and you feel stuck. It could be a relationship, an addiction, a lie you believe, a painful event, or a difficult work environment. Regardless of what it is, you desperately need God to dramatically intervene in your life. Sound familiar?
Many of us are facing impossible situations where we need this kind of breakthrough in our lives. Yet most of us sit and wait for God to make it happen, and then we wonder why it is that we don’t experience breakthrough as often or as fast as we would like.
We need to know that breakthrough is not something we sit around and wait for. Breakthrough is God waiting on us to respond in obedience to what He has already commanded and already promised.
Breakthrough happens when we take the first offensive step against the barriers in our life. When we say, "I’m going to trust that God is going to supernaturally do the impossible."
God does the breakthrough, but He’s waiting for us to take that first step of faith. We have to believe in God’s goodness, and that God has already willed the breakthrough for our life. Then we actually become "agents of breakthrough," unleashing God’s supernatural power to change our impossible situations in our homes, workplaces and relationships.
Throughout Jesus’ ministry, we see him unleashing God’s power in impossible situations. He also appointed 12 young apostles and taught them to do the same.
How did Jesus teach them? He demonstrated the love and goodness of God in action by preaching the gospel of love and forgiveness, healing the sick, and setting people free from demonic oppression. Then he expected his disciples to do the same. Jesus’ goal was to help them understand that they too were supposed to be agents of breakthrough.
In Mark, chapter 6, we read that Jesus sends out the apostles to preach the gospel, cast out demons, and heal people just like He did (Mark 6:7-12). Then, later in the story, Jesus is teaching to a large crowd of over 5,000 people when He asks the disciples to do "the impossible."
By this time it was late in the day, so his disciples came to him. "This is a remote place," they said, "and it's already very late. Send the people away so that they can go to the surrounding countryside and villages and buy themselves something to eat." But Jesus answered, "You give them something to eat." (Mark 6:35-37)
Jesus expected his disciples to feed the thousands of people in the crowd even though it was impossible for them. That’s because Jesus knew that it was not impossible for God. Similarly, Jesus expects us to take on the seemingly impossible in our own lives. Why? God expects to do impossible things in us and through us.
How exactly does it happen? First, we need to look at what we do have and then give it to God in faith. Jesus knew the disciples didn’t have enough food to feed thousands. He asked them to bring him the small amount of food they had – five loaves of bread and two fish – and He supernaturally multiplied it. Similarly, God wants us to consider what we do have. This could be our gifts, our talents, our experiences, and unique personality. Then, He wants to use us as an agent of change in whatever impossible situation we are facing.
Most importantly, we must truly believe that God is good – not just intellectually – but really believe. We must be willing to obey Him and embrace that He is willing to do the impossible in us and through us for His glory, so that more would come to know Him. No matter what we are facing, God promises to show up in our difficult situations in a way that declares and reveals His glory and goodness to the world.
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