A Season of Fasting = A Lifetime of Obedience

by Luke Dudenhofer 11. January 2011 04:56

Hey Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I’ve been so encouraged to hear about God’s work in His people so far during this fast.  Sins are being brought into the light, burdens are being given over to Jesus, hard hearts are being softened, steps of obedience are happening… our God is purifying His people.  Let’s keep seeking our Savior!

 Jesus has been speaking to me about the purpose of our season of fasting.  While it’s good to deny ourselves and intentionally pursue God more than we normally would during the fast – just doing that is not all God wants.  The aim of fasting is to establish, through daily habits of seeking God, a closeness with Jesus that continues long after fasting is done.  Fasting is a tool to transform the rest of my life.

One of my goals this fast was to re-establish the practice of prayer journaling, a tool God has used greatly to help me grow in Him.  Through the fast, He is showing me that instead of “fitting it in sometime” I need to start my day in the Word, prayer and journaling because that is the pattern to keep after the fast.  My wife and I are looking for more time to pray and grow in spiritual oneness.  During the fast we’re trying to find the time that can be sustained during “normal life”.  Still working on that, and trusting God to establish in our marriage a grace-filled discipline of seeking the Lord together.

Psalm 40:6-8 speaks to what God is after in His children. 
Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but my ears you have pierced; burnt offerings and sin offering you did not require.  Then I said, “Here I am, I have come – it is written about in the scroll.   I desire to do your will, O my God;  your law is within my heart.” 

More than sacrifice and offerings (season of fasting), God desires servants who have His life-giving law within their hearts and desire nothing more than to continually do His will. 

May God bless your season of fasting by establishing in you holy desires and freeing habits of doing His will continually.

Seeking Jesus with you

 

- Luke

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Jesus is Alive

by Luke Dudenhofer 16. April 2009 06:05

Last Sunday was the greatest Resurrection Celebration I’ve ever experienced.  What made it so great was the tangible presence of Jesus in His people!  I can’t fully describe the sense of excitement, the willingness to clap and shout and give God praise, the overflowing joy of knowing that Jesus is alive!  The Church was being the Church that day –a people called out by God to declare His praise to the world! (I Peter 2:9) 

During our Celebration we opened the “Edification Mic” for people to share what God has been doing in their lives.  Between songs of praise, several testified to God’s work in them:  fresh reminders of God’s intensely personal love for His children, God’s sovereign protection and preparation of small children in grieving the death of a loved one,  an exhortation to remain utterly dependant upon the grace of God in witnessing – not trusting our own wisdom or experience, a step of growth in embracing our church family as “my family”, an understanding that we need God’s Word more than physical food, an encouragement to love one another as we are all “messed up” but being changed in Christ, and other personal expressions of thanksgiving to God.  I was softened, humbled and challenged through these words, the words of God’s people ministering to one another.

The visitors who were present on Sunday saw some convincing evidence for the gospel.  In God’s mercy, several responded to the teaching and appeal to follow Christ.  While they heard the Word of God through the sermon, they experienced the presence of the Living Christ through the lives of His followers.  Jesus is Alive – we cannot deny that He is living in these people!

I felt like we began to taste the blessings of living out I Corinthians 14:24-25.  “But if an unbeliever or someone who does not understand comes in while everybody is prophesying, he will be judged by all, and the secrets of his heart will be laid bare.  So he will fall down and worship God, exclaiming, “God is really among you!”

My heart is full of thanks today.  Thank you Jesus that You are alive, and that You live in us!  Amen.

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I Need Rest, Not Entertainment - Pt 1

by Luke Dudenhofer 8. April 2009 04:49

Recently I was very, very tired.  One weary Sunday after preaching, while asking God to help me live out what I preached, I had a clear sense of Him speaking to my spirit, “You need rest, not entertainment.”  For much of my life the end of a hard day, the resolution of a trying situation, or finishing a long week meant that I was entitled to some kind of entertaining reward.  For me, television or movies always won the day.  I came to discover that my “default setting” in response to stress was to turn to entertainment.  This impression concerning rest has been producing thoughts I’m trying to work through so I can “change my settings” to be programmed in a way that pleases God.

Just what is entertainment?  Webster’s defines it as a noun – a diversion or amusement, something that holds our thoughts or attention.   Entertainmnent is the plethora of possible activities that divert us away from reality, fill our thinking, and manipulate our feelings.   In my experience, while entertainments are enjoyable (otherwise we wouldn’t run to them so much), I have found that they steal my time, weary my mind, feed the flesh through subtle compromises, and encourage an attitude of passivity because they require no response.  I can be entertained and simply walk away unchanged, unmoved.  But through entertainmnet I have been influenced in my spirit.  Feeding on this world’s entertainment can only result in living a worldly life.

So what would God have us do?  Are TV, movies, the net, mags, books all evil?  Should we go back to the monastery so we can stay pure?  I don’t think so.  The answer, as God is teaching me, is found in pursuing and embracing God’s rest.  More thoughts on that to come.

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On Finishing and Starting

by Luke Dudenhofer 1. October 2008 18:16
We heard fireworks last night.  Usually they’re done by this time of year, but last night was a special finish.  We live in Bridgeport, within the shadow (and earshot) of US Cellular Field, home of the Chicago White Sox.  Last night they won regular season game 163, a playoff for the division championship and an entrance into the post-season.  
I hadn’t really followed the Sox this year.  I heard they weren’t favored to win, their veteran stars kept getting injured, and the other team in town seemed to be stealing the media spotlight.  But for the majority of the season, the Sox led their division.  They persevered through challenging times and last night they finished well.  
As a follower of Christ, I want to be able to say “I’m finishing well today.”   Whether or not people give me high approval ratings, I need to end my day knowing I’ve done the right thing.  When I’m feeling strong or limping home, I need to crash with a clear conscience before God.  And whether I get the accolades or not, I need to be filling my days serving others, not myself.  Amidst the recent uncertainty in the economy, the unstoppable destruction of a hurricane, it’s good to know God’s promises.  Oh, He cares that I started – that I’ve come to Jesus by faith and found forgiveness and healing and life.  But then it really matters to God how I finish.  It matters that everyday demonstrates that simple trust in Him I had at the beginning.  Trust enough to do what He says.  Trust enough to deny myself so I can live for Him.  
And just like the White Sox, finishing well with God promises the start of something greater -  eternal life in His presence.  God honors those who finish well.  “So do not throw away your confidence;  it will be richly rewarded.  You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised.”  Hebrews 10:35-36

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