total surrender Archives — Jimmy Larche https://jimmylarche.breakawayoutreach.com/tag/total-surrender/ Abiding in Him Weekly Devotional Mon, 03 May 2021 13:40:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://jimmylarche.breakawayoutreach.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/cropped-2024-Jimmy-Larche-logo-aih-32x32.png total surrender Archives — Jimmy Larche https://jimmylarche.breakawayoutreach.com/tag/total-surrender/ 32 32 Wrestling With God: Jacob the Luchador https://jimmylarche.breakawayoutreach.com/jacob-wrestles-with-god-genesis/ Sat, 20 Jan 2018 18:57:33 +0000 http://www.jimmylarche.com/?p=10017 Jacob wrestles with God in order to get past his past. Like so many people today, he didn't have the confidence to face the future because of the guilt of the past.

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Text: Genesis 32:1-32

“And Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day.” –Genesis 32:24

It was the 80s. We had hair bands, parachute pants, and breakdancing. We also had Hulk Hogan! On occasion, my brother and I would turn our living room into a makeshift cage match, branding our very own version of WrestleMania. Decked in fluorescent bandanas, cheap sunglasses, and spandex tights, we were sure poised to intimidate. Pandemonium would break loose until out came the woman in the black mask, “Granny The Eliminator,” as we called her, and Grandma would clear the ring of all wannabe luchadores!

Though many consider the 80s to have been the golden age of wrestling, the very first recorded wrestling match actually took place in Genesis 32. Twenty years earlier, Jacob had stolen his brother’s birthright and cheated him out of their father’s blessing, then ran far away. Now Jacob is returning to his homeland and must face his brother who had sworn to kill him. Would Esau come out in war to exact revenge? Jacob was distressed and very afraid, and rightly so.

He didn’t have the confidence to stand before Esau because, like so many believers today, he was hindered by the guilt of the past. As Shakespeare wrote, “Conscience does make cowards of us all.”

Jacob took all this fear, guilt, and anxiety to the right place. He exuded a sincere prayer, filled with humility and faith, recounting God’s promise and seeking His divine protection. Then, having done the work of prayer, Jacob had to do the more difficult work of confrontation. Known for his effectual prayer life, George Mueller was once asked to elaborate on the most important aspect of prayer. His answer: “The 15 minutes after I have said, ‘Amen.’” The true test of the depth of our prayer will be seen in what we do after the prayer has concluded.

Jacob knows that God has promised him “good” back in the land of his kindred—but the way back to that country must go through a road called Reconciliation, a.k.a. Surrender.

In faith, he bets the house on God’s promise and boldly resolves to risk everything by continuing on to face Esau. It’s dangerous, but necessary. By crossing over the ford of Jabbok, he leaves himself no way for retreat. The way home always involves this crossing—the place of absolute surrender. Behind Jacob is the past: the lying, the manipulating, the deceiving, the stealing and the cheating. Before him is a new way of life: honest repentance, reconciliation, healing, generosity, selflessness, giving.

Jacob spends the night alone in prayer and has his own WrestleMania. That night a man wrestles with him until daybreak. This wrestling match is with none other than God Himself, possibly a Christophany (a pre-incarnate appearance of Christ). God stepped into the ring with Jacob that night because he wanted something from him; He wanted all of Jacob’s self-reliance, his pride, and his carnal scheming. He was there to take it by force if necessary. Jacob wanted God’s blessing. But before he could get it, he had to be delivered from his own self-will and self-reliance. As the Lord wore him down, conquering him little by little, Jacob clung to Him and said, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.”

After prevailing with God that night, the Lord changed Jacob’s name to Israel. The name “Jacob” meant “Grasper,” and he was no longer to live that way, being shrewd or sneaky enough to conquer life on his own. He was to live from a whole new identity, “Israel”—signifying the rule and reign of God over his life.

What started out as a scary confrontation with the past, ended up being an ageless portrait of redemption and reconciliation. Jacob is reunited with Esau in a most gracious, merciful fashion. God mended a dysfunctional situation and restored a broken family that day, neither of which would be realized without humility, faithful obedience (necessary risk taking), and the struggle to surrender the past to God.

Like Jacob, God will continue to wear us down until we are stripped of all self-sufficiency and come to that place of total surrender. Yet it is in this place of His dominion, and our white flags raised, that we truly overcome the past and live with a freedom like no other.

Whatever you may be wrestling with today, true spiritual victory always goes through the place called surrender. Think about that as you seek to abide in Him this week.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, you have promised good to me. I also understand that the blessing on the other side will necessitate my willingness to walk in obedience even when it is uncomfortable, painful, or risky. In those times of tension, may I cling to you and always seek to surrender my will in exchange for your dominion over my life. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Jacob didn’t have the confidence to stand before Esau because, like so many people today, he was hindered by the guilt of the past. Tweet this

Questions for Reflection and/or Family Discussion:

  1. If you experienced the 80s, what are some things you remember most?
  2. When was the last time you and God wrestled about something?
  3. Why do you think reconciliation was such a big deal to God in Genesis 32, and in our lives today?
  4. Obedience to God often makes us vulnerable. When have you ever experienced this firsthand?
  5. What is a struggle you have right now that needs to be surrendered to God?

 

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Breaking Our Flask for God https://jimmylarche.breakawayoutreach.com/alabaster-flask-oil-worship/ Sun, 10 Sep 2017 13:24:44 +0000 http://www.jimmylarche.com/?p=9462 The value of our devotion to God can never be measured by the world's metrics, or by people who don't understand our heart.

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Text: Mark 14:3-9

“Wherever the gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will be told in memory of her.” Mark 14:9

Have you ever looked at the way another person invested their life and thought, “That doesn’t make any sense to me”? Perhaps it is a hobby they enjoy, a certain lifestyle they hold to, a business enterprise they pursue, or a ministry they undertake. We may not see the same value that they see. Sometimes we even criticize what we don’t understand.

When Mary of Bethany broke the alabaster flask of very costly oil and poured it over Jesus’ head, it was met with a question of disdain. There were some who said to themselves indignantly, “Why was the ointment wasted like that? For this ointment could have been sold for more than three hundred denarii and given to the poor.”

As Mary gave her devotion to the Lord, others didn’t value her way of worship. They thought of it as a wasted expenditure and judged the situation in their naivety. Judas may have started the criticism, but he wasn’t alone for long. Mark made it clear that they criticized her sharply. Each one looked at the oil on Jesus’ head and considered it wasted. Perhaps Mary started to wonder if she did something wrong.

The value of our devotion to God can never be measured by the world’s metrics, or by people who don’t understand our heart. God doesn’t call us to a devotion, a service, or expression of worship that others need to understand. He calls us to a life that pleases Him. Jesus commended Mary for her extravagant act of devotion, and said, “Wherever the gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will be told in memory of her.”

Our Lord is filled with overflowing joy whenever He sees any of us doing what Mary did— not being bound by a particular set of rules, but being totally surrendered to Him. God poured out the life of His Son “that the world through Him might be saved” (John 3:17). Are we prepared to pour out our lives for Him?

Now is the time for us to break “the flask” of our lives, to stop seeking our own satisfaction, or the approval of others, and to pour out our lives completely before God. You should never apologize for having a spiritual abandon that others don’t understand. Think about that as you seek to abide in Him this week.

PRAYER

Heavenly Father, help us to live, worship, and serve with spiritual abandon and absolute surrender no matter what it may cost us. Even when it doesn’t make sense to others, may we give ourselves to wholehearted devotion to you. In Jesus’ name, Amen..

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