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November 11, 2019 by admin

vlog Visionary Leadership part 1

THE NEED FOR LEADERSHIP

In a conversation with my dear friend and spiritual leader, Ken Chant, he expressed some sentiments on the needs of America. In brief, he stated “With the incredible social, economic, political and spiritual problems in America, the only hope (for her) is a good dictatorship!” Well, perhaps some would see this as an oversimplification, or genuinely appalling, but there is some truth in Dr Chant’s words.

Every four years in the United States, a new President is elected who promises “change.” It seems our country embraces the reality of our problems, and many believe that a charismatic leader of our representative democracy could make the changes sought. Though I pray for and hope that our President makes positive changes, the truth remains that the problems in our society (or any for that matter) are too great for one man, even if he/she was a benevolent dictator. Our country, as with most nations, is desperate for leaders who can make a difference in industry, business, government, and in the Church. The key to success, in any culture, is to rest on the shoulder of its leaders. More than ever, we need Godly leaders to take serious their call and make an impactful difference.

There are two places or positions where leaders are desperately needed. You may be surprised by my perspective. I list them in priority:

The Family – recent studies indicate that 70% of marriage partners come from broken homes. Single parent family systems (usually the mother) is becoming the norm. The effects of the absent father, whether due to divorce, death or social withdrawal, is being felt now more than ever. The breakdown of moral values and biblical absolutes leave mother and child without the safety of a healthy boundary. The need for leadership, in proper biblical order (Ephesians 5:1 and 1 Peter 3) is needed, and must become a priority of the Church and nation, if the child is to thrive, and not merely survive.

The Church – Gilbert Cann, in his book Liberating Leadership states, “I learned that God places in the hearts, minds, and wills of young believers a strong desire for direction, counsel, help, discernment, support and encouragement of older Christians.”[1]

 This is especially seen in the inner city. With the absence of leadership in the home, children look to other places for role identification and self-image establishment. How tragic for so many that the models available are seen on T.V. or the silver screen, or worse yet, in the drug pusher, prostitute, or young leader on the block. The church, which should be a haven of rest, a hospital for the hurting, a home for the wayward, is perceived as a cold, heartless institution more interested in one’s dress, clichés and offerings than the condition of the soul. This perception is profound and is perpetuated by the media and the Church itself.

Visionary Leadership
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The Apostle Paul wrote to Titus (Titus 2) to encourage the older men and older women in the faith to care for the younger. The call of every ministry leader is to “Lead and Feed” the sheep (see John 21). When the church remembers its central focus of establishing the Kingdom of God as expressed in righteousness (right moral relations with God, self and/or another) peace (tranquillity and rest in God) and joy (happiness and contentment with purpose) through its leaders, and the transformation of society will begin.

Certainly, we need leadership in other areas. We need educators, business executives, politicians, etc. to fulfill Godly expectations for the administration of justice, mercy and humility. If the home and church are functioning as God intended, the leaders, so desperately needed in other fields, would emerge.

It is my belief that leaders are developed in the crucible of relationships; as is biblical character formed in faithful men and women. The character of man is much more important than the charisma and when both are found in proper measure, sprinkled with a large measure of knowledge, understanding, wisdom, and the Spirit of God, dynamic leaders are produced.

Leadership ultimately begins with God and will end with God, and is in His hands at all points in between. God has chosen to work with men (Emmanuel, God with us) to fulfill this glorious purpose. He chooses leaders, and intends success for each one. In any case, He begins in the counsel of his own will, and with a vision.

[1] Cann, G., Liberating Leadership, p 39, 1989

Filed Under: Dr. Stan Vlog

October 29, 2019 by admin

Walk in Wisdom Vlog Living in Freedom

Context, Context, Context

Paul’s teaching on the greater glory in Christ is the context, and the problematic but powerful church in Corinth was his audience. Through Christ and by Holy Spirit, Paul presents the potent benefits of life in the Spirit (Pneuma, breath, presence) which includes;

  • Life Without Barriers. This does not mean I can do my own thing, living only for the moment; but it does mean a life that is open and without guilt, and especially without shame.

For in fact, as we look into the face of Christ, which we do through the disciplines of the study of the word, worship, service and prayer, our face is lifted.  It is a true face-lift, not the Hollywood version.  It not only provides an outward freedom, but also is also a true lifting of our perspective from self and the world, to Christ and his divine purposes. As we look unto Jesus, who is the author and the completer of our faith, the one who for our own benefit transforms us from the inside out, we are truly changed.  (Heb. 12:1, 2)  Further…

  • His freedom allows us to be filled with all the fullness of God. This includes his life, light, love, and our praise or our Doxa, for his honor or glory.

In light of this, we can and should expect that as we live in relationship with the Lord, we will see complete liberation from the past, our sin, sickness, fear, etc., as this is the plan of God for us, as described in Isaiah 61 and Luke 4.

“The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me; because the LORD has anointed me to bring good news to the afflicted, He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and freedom to prisoners; to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord, (and in Isaiah the day of vengeance, but this is left out of Jesus reading as recorded in Luke 4).

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This liberty or freedom refers to the great Jubilee God provided for the children of Israel although they rarely if ever practiced it.  It included the cancelling of all debts, allowing families to start over once again. What a joy this would be, a divinely planned bankruptcy and an opportunity to start over!  In practical terms, this was good news indeed! The law of Jubilee is found in Leviticus 25:10…

“You shall thus consecrate the fiftieth year and proclaim a release through the land to all its inhabitants. I shall be a jubilee for you, and each of you shall return to his own property and each of you will return to his family.”

The Jubilee discussed in the Old Testament, with all of its glory, was just a foreshadowing of the glory God has provided for us in Christ, under the New Covenant. God’s plan was activated in the death, burial, resurrection and ascension of Christ.  He did this for his children, so they may live in true freedom.  The purpose is to transform us into the very image of Christ, so that we can be and do all for God, our families, and for our society; as God ordained us to be and do from the beginning (see Gen. 1:26). The question is this, what is freedom?  How can we experience the abundant life promised by Jesus in John 10:10? That is the subject of this booklet.

“Either sin is with you, lying on your shoulders,

or it is lying on Christ, the Lamb of God.

Now if it is lying on your back, you are lost;

but if it is resting on Christ, you are free, and you will be saved.

Now choose what you want.”

 Martin Luther

Filed Under: Dr. Stan Vlog

October 15, 2019 by admin

Walking in Wisdom VLOG Living in Freedom PT 1

In the year 2011, it was my privilege to present a series of messages to a dynamic church in Fontana California; Fontana Christian Fellowship International, pastored by Gary and Gina Holly. This year’s sermon series was titled Freedom in Christ: Living the Abundant Life. Living a Christian life is not always easy. In fact, some say it’s impossible for us to live the Christian life. All we can do is allow the life of Christ, which is essentially Jesus himself, to become fully expressed through us. In many ways, that is the theme of this booklet.

Finding true freedom in Christ does not come by our self-effort or by great striving.  It does not come by our first class prayer or by our intense study in the word of God, although all of these things are good. In fact, we live the life of Christ by allowing Christ to live his life through us, where he fully expresses the heart of a loving Father to the world. Thus, it is my hope that as God gives grace, this small book will be a blessing to many in the body of Christ who struggle with the concept of freedom.

What is freedom and how do we fully gain the inheritance of the abundant life Christ has obtained for us, by his death, burial, resurrection and ascension?  We know that Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father in glory, and that we are seated with him in the spirit.  We are far above principalities and powers, living in righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit…now.

It is inherent for every believer to find their role in the life of the church, and to find out what the word of God says about this important concept.  It is fully discussed by Paul in Second Corinthians 3:17-18.

“For the Lord is the spirit and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty. But we all with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory just as from the Lord; the Spirit”

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In the context of Paul’s writing in 1 Corinthians, he teaches specifically on the greater glory found in Christ, rather than the glory found in Moses and the Ten Commandments. He provides a contrast to the glory of the Old Covenant depicted here as seen in the face of Moses.  Moses covered his face when coming down the mountain from his encounter with God.  It was not because God’s glory was too magnificent, but rather because the glory  (that is the light reflected from the face of Moses) had faded after he left the Lord’s presence. There was glory in the Old Covenant, but not the same level of glory we find in the New Covenant in Christ through the shedding of his blood.

You could say what is contrasted here is the difference between the outer presence of God; or his glory, goodness and grace with the inner presence of God.  (This is a concept that will be defined more clearly later in this text.)   It is the awareness and the reality that by the Holy Spirit, Christ lives in us.   He is expressing who he is through us, both as individuals and within the body of Christ.

To be continued soon.

Or get your own copy of the book for 25 % off using the coupon code:  freedom

Filed Under: Dr. Stan Vlog

September 6, 2019 by admin

Dr. Stan vlog Part II

Two Remarkable Things

In all of Jesus’ ministry, two things stand out to me, and are so vitally needed in the 21st Century.  These two things seemed to resonate in Christ, and he responded to them with remarkable power and delight; faith and community.

Whenever Jesus found faith (expecting that a good God can and will act on our behalf), bells and whistles went off.  The leper beseeching him, the woman at the well engaging him, children running to him, roofs were removed for friends to get to him, little men climbed trees to see him, the young man who squandered his inheritance, returned to the Father, still smelling of the world and sin, yet they all had two things in common.

First, they were all marginalized people.

Some were rich, some poor, with differing cultures and races represented. All were wounded by relationships, and all were humble enough to admit they needed a savior.

Second, each expressed their faith in their own way.

Jesus, with true eyes of compassion, was able to look beyond their brokenness (causing isolation from community) and responded to faith with virtue (power/life).  Unlike modern Church life, the worst example of which is the so-called “televangelist,” who unknowingly encourages isolation; He says, “Send in your offering, and touch your T.V. screen for a healing.”  The process is all done with anonymity and isolation.  Where much of the modern Church emphasizes miracles or healings, Jesus emphasized the return to community — a return which should have been in most cases unnecessary, and in rare cases resulted in full, complete and immediate restoration (see the Prodigal son).

Jesus understood (and so must we) that there is something much worse than being without eye or limb, or from one culture or another.  Being separate from the Kingdom of God (the true Christian culture) is the only tragedy!  Jesus ministered to the whole person, with a focus on returning to community those who, from a poverty of spirit, responded in faith to his message of hope — a message they believed without reservation.

Which brings me a greater question…” What was it about Jesus that made it easy for the child, the leper, the prostitute, the tax collector, the embarrassed wedding host, etc. to come to Him?”

The answer is painfully obvious, but only the blind can see it.

Blind Jesus

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Jesus was blind to leprosy; He did not see a leper, He saw a man.

Jesus was blind to the adulterer; He did not see the adultery, He saw a woman.

Children were not a nuisance, but the inheritors of the Kingdom.

There was no woman of Samaria, just a woman with thirst.  No soldier with a sick daughter, just a father with a broken heart.  What made Jesus so very approachable, and what seemed to release God’s power through him when faith was present, was the compassion he felt for the “whosoever will” of his day.  What made Jesus so desirable, what seemed to release God’s power through him was manifested faith that triggered the compassion he felt for the common man. At all times, and in all ways, Jesus expressed the heart of his Father and ours.

The Church of the 21st Century must somehow return to the ministry of Jesus Christ!

We must acknowledge that brokenness is everywhere, and our incessantly morbid need to analyze the cause before providing the cure must cease.  Who cares (does God?) how the AIDS, cancer, divorce, homosexuality, came to be.  If faith can be formed, we must look beyond the color, race, socioeconomic status, denomination or any other thing that divides us, seeing instead the wonderful person, created in God’s image, in need of God’s grace, to be administered to by God’s servants, to open again (where wholeness will occur) to them the Christian community, the Kingdom of God.  People knew Jesus saw beyond their label and was moved with compassion to call life from death, hope from despair, friendship from isolation.

The last thing Jesus taught before His death was the importance of community.  In the Upper Room he washed the disciples’ feet, showing humble servant-leadership to be a requirement for Kingdom service.  He gave them the ritual meal, becoming the common bond for all believers throughout the ages, to be celebrated as often as we gather.  He instituted in His apostles the vital truth that unity in love was/is the goal; all else is secondary to our vibrant love for one another.

Oh, how hard we have struggled and how far we have to go!  We must return to the way of Christ!

Jesus built a community of faith which was to be inclusive (not exclusive as the Jews of his day, or the Romans, Greeks and many present cultural groups), motivated by love, invigorated by a level of faith in God’s ample provision.  His disciples took the ministry and methods of Jesus (in limited scope, according to their gifting, limited worldview, measure of faith) and applied them in their cultural context.

We, his ministers in the 21st Century, are challenged to do the same.

Filed Under: author spotlight, books, Dr. Stan Vlog

September 6, 2019 by admin

Dr. Stan vlog part I

In case you missed part one… we are reposting it here on the Vision Publishing site, because unfortunately Dr. Stan’s website is a bit broken!  You heard it correctly, it broke.  We are working on a whole new site for him and he will be back up and running in the very near future.  In the meantime, we will be utilizing the publishing website to keep you up to date.  So here is part One of Supernatural Arch… and we will make Part II available soon.  Thanks!

Get this today at 25% off with coupon code Super Special … get your copy today. 

As we move forward in the 21st Century, it behooves us as ministers of Christ to gaze again on the ministry of Jesus.  In recent reflection, there are many things in Christ’s ministry to hurting humanity which are noteworthy…too many to discuss here.  However, in all His greatness, one dimension is often overlooked, especially by the evangelical and charismatic ministers.

Scripture reveals that Jesus only did what His Father told him to do…and that he went about doing good (God things), healing all oppressed of the devil, for God was with him (Immanuel).  In recognizing that Jesus acted on the Father’s desire, doing the work He was called to do, we see an influential intent of immense importance.

  • Sin causes isolation.
  • Sickness causes isolation.
  • Mass choices in society create isolation.

Isolation and unfamiliarity create division, ignorance and blindness of soul, often institutionalized over generations (racism, ageism, sexism, Christian sin, etc., ad nauseum).  The distinctiveness of Jesus’ ministry can be seen in his incredible ability to bring Good News to poor souls, removing the barriers to social intercourse, opening wide the door to disenfranchised, isolated individuals and groups (including families) who were once far off, now brought near.  Examples of this could fill volumes.  A few instances will suffice.

Consider the leper in Matthew 1.  Charismatics will concentrate on the power encounter and the miraculous healing wrought by the touch of the Master (also see the woman with issue of blood). The more liberal theologians will see the humanitarianism of Christ while wondering why he did not establish Christ Hospital in Palestine.

But notice the greater intent of Christ’s example.

In verse 4, after the leprosy was removed by the power of God, Jesus urges (commands) the man (him, not the former leper!) to “show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing what Moses commanded (Lev 14:1-32) for a testimony to them”.

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How often I have read this passage while missing a key element.  The offering to the priest, the testimony given was not to brag on God alone (or as in many charismatic circles, to brag on one’s worthiness to receive, or God’s good judgment in choosing me for a miracle, healing, or blessing) but also for the priest, as representative of the faith community, to acknowledge that isolationist treatment of the leper could no longer be given, and that acceptance into the community of faith was mandated. Jesus had a different vision than most in the church have today. For he could not see a leper at all, as his disciples, family and the man himself did. Jesus saw a man, from the household of faith, deserving the grace of God, which he happily supplied.

The woman at the well (John 4:7-30) gives another example of Christ’s ministry of wholeness. This woman was isolated and unacceptable to polite society; she could only draw water by herself, devoid of the fellowship of the other Samaritan women.  Her healing of soul occurred through the revelation of Jesus as the Christ (the first one to receive it); he removed her shame and transformed her purpose, which led to national revival.

It has been justly stated that all brokenness occurs within relationship.  Long before divorce there existed a happily married, hopeful couple.  Prior to the alcoholic, drug addict, abuser or victim was a person, created in the image of God with infinite worth and potentiality.  All brokenness can be traced to relational wounds found in family, society, religious articles, and directly with God himself (all have sinned and fallen short …the wages of sin is death, or isolation from God (Romans 3:23, 6:23).

Just as brokenness occurs through relationship, no healing will occur without it.

( more on the next vlog coming soon.)

Filed Under: author spotlight, Dr. Stan Vlog

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