Tag: YWAM England

  • Redirecting Our Hunger

    Redirecting Our Hunger

     

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    A few weeks ago, I said that I would post another of Dr Atef’s wonderful thoughts on prayer.   If you did not read those, then it would help if you know that he is Egyptian by birth and spent several decades as a “Celibate Priest” in Egypt.  Much of that time was spent in prayerful seclusion.  In recent years, the Lord directed him to relocate near to his sister in Arizona.  Then her husband died and Dr Atef’s assistance was of vital importance.  In the meantime, he was received into the Orthodox Church of North America and many men and women of all ages gathered round him to form a prayerful community.  It is my great privilege to see him from time to time.  I was there in December and he will pay a short visit to Highfield Oval, with two teaching sessions on Friday evening, March 31st, 2019.  The sessions will be open to guests.

    The title I have given this is a little misleading because the notes are about more than redirecting hunger, but they do show important insight into our longings and hunger.  For example:

    The body and soul of the human being longs for sex and for being united with the other. The world makes him/her constantly hungry, never having enough of this greatest pleasure.”

    He then goes on to write about how that hunger after that which will never satisfy can actually be filled by fellowship with God.  These notes are worth meditating upon.

    Click on the link below to read the Dr. Atef notes Transforming Prayer.

    transforming prayer

  • A Rich and Satisfying New Year

    A Rich and Satisfying New Year

     

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    As we were approaching the end of 2018, someone asked me, “Have you set some goals for 2019?”  I couldn’t answer that question immediately because I hadn’t set any goals.  so I admitted that I had not.  That conversation made me wonder if I am becoming less focussed and is that a good thing or a bad thing?

    Many years ago, I learned that a goal is an objective I want to achieve with a time-frame for doing it.  Too often if we have no deadline, even if it is self-imposed, our best ideas don’t come to pass.  So I found that definition really helpful because it prodded me to be more faith-filled and proactive.  Without a time-frame we can let days, weeks, months and even years pass without taking the risks required to make an idea become reality.

    Why do I hesitate?

    So I asked myself, “Why am I hesitant to set goals for 2019?” I had to think about that for quite a while before I could decide whether I was becoming more lethargic or had a good reason for not having goals.  I know I have set goals before and that has been very helpful.  When I first felt that God had spoken to me to initiate and implement the Reconciliation Walk, I set a goal for getting underway in five years.  Actually that was pretty much set for me because when God spoke to me about it and I began to learn more about the Crusades, I recognised that the 900th anniversary of the First Crusade was coming up in five years.  That goal really helped me focus and get it done!

    Is it God-given?

    That goal was marked by a conviction that it was a given by revelation; that made it different than a self-determined goal.  In practice, it was a very big difference because I had real faith for it and as Hebrews 11:1 says, “…faith is the guarantee of things we can’t see.” There is another passage of scripture that says it another way: 1st John 4:14, 15: “And we are confident that he hears us whenever we ask anything that pleases him. And since we know he hears us when we make our requests, we also know that he will give us what we ask for.”

    Faith makes things happen

    I think that is why I have become less interested in setting goals for the New Year.  However, it shouldn’t stop me asking the Holy Spirit to tell me anything he wants me to know or do in 2019. I don’t really have the confidence—or perhaps it is presumption—to set goals for myself.  But I do desperately want to know what God wants to do with me and through me.  That way I can have genuine faith and faith makes things happen!

    The most wonderful news!

    As you and I look forward to 2019, there is so much uncertainty about the major events of the world.  I think about that quite a lot, but it is always in a bigger context.  Most of us have lived in a very long season of peace and our general prosperity is greater than at any time in history.  Day to day life is SO much better than it has been thus far in human history.

    As long as we invest our time and efforts—and humility—into our relationships with Jesus, with our family and with our friends and neighbours, this is a great time to be alive.

    The best news of all is what Jesus said in John 10:10.  I like the way the New Living Translation puts it, “My purpose for them [us] is to give them [us] a rich and satisfying life.

    We may or may not have goals, but we do have One Who Watches Over Us; One who is able to make everything work together for good.  And His purpose couldn’t be better!  I plan to go along with His plans for me.  Experience tells me that I am in for some surprises I could never plan. So, I guess that means I do have a goal. My goal is to actively, daily put myself in the hands of the One who wants my life to be rich and satisfying.  Beat that!

    Lynn Green.

  • An Egyptian Treasure

    An Egyptian Treasure

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    As you probably know, Egypt is full of hidden treasure and archaeologists continue to make new finds.  Egypt has also held much treasure for me. What an unexpected discovery!  My fellowship with Egyptian Christians has enriched me so much.  One of those treasures was particularly well-disguised.

    It began with unwelcome news.

    I had convened a group of international leaders from Europe, the Middle East and Africa and we had decided to meet in Cairo initially and then make the 90 minute drive to a part of the Western Desert known as Wadi El Natrun.  We were being hosted by an Egyptian, who brought me unwelcome news on the first evening in Cairo.  Without asking me, he had invited a Coptic Orthodox monk (more accurately, a celibate priest), to deliver us a lecture on The History of Monasticism.  We had a full agenda for our few days together and I did not want to lose a couple of hours listening to a boring lecture.  But I couldn’t see a way to get out of it.

    Later that evening I saw a very slight man in a long black cassock entering the house and our host whispered to me; “That’s the man who will be speaking to us tomorrow.  He will need a couple of hours.”  My heart sank, even as I managed a weak smile.

    The next day we made the drive into the desert and found Dr. Atef, the man in the cassock, waiting for us.  The moment he began to speak God spoke to me and said; “This man will be a very important friend to you.”  As he spoke to us, it became like “water in a desert land” to my soul and spirit.

    In the years that followed he completed a Discipleship Training School in YWAM and became a faithful and faith-filled and perceptive intercessor for YWAM, for me and for my family.

    In the years that have followed, I have met him in a number of places around the world.  A couple of weeks ago I went to Phoenix, Arizona where he has lived for a few years and also where a growing number of people have gathered round him in a new monastic order.  I made the trip to Arizona just to spend a couple of hours a day for a few days with Dr. Atef.

    As usual, I came away challenged to grow more in Christ and encouraged by God’s love for me.  He gave me three primary teachings and the first one accompanies this article.  I hope and pray that you will also be challenged and encouraged.  Do take the time to dig for the treasure!

    Click on the link below to read the Dr. Atef notes Prayer Life.

    Prayer Life (Different Features)