Monday, October 28, 2013

Covenants ("Brit" in Hebrew)


Messianic Bible (news@biblesforisrael.com)




Jerusalem

Shalom,

“This is the covenant…” (Jeremiah 31:33)

While Western cultures are familiar with the idea of blood brothers, they are often not so familiar with the concept of a blood covenant, which is important in much of the world.

Covenant is also one of the most important concepts and central themes found in the Bible.



Jewish men pray at the Western (Wailing) Wall

The Hebrew word for covenant is brit, which appears 284 times in the Tanakh (Old Testament). (Strong's)

This word implies pact, contract, treaty or agreement between two parties and is likely derived from the Hebrew verb barah, which means to cut.

This Hebrew root brings to mind the Covenant of the Pieces (Brit bein HaBetarim or Covenant Between the Parts) in which the smoking firepot and blazing torchpassed between the halves of the heifer, goat, and ram that Abraham cut when God promised him the Land, providing its physical dimensions:

“When the sun had set and darkness had fallen, a smoking firepot with a blazing torch appeared and passed between the pieces. On that day the Lord made a covenant with Abram and said, ‘To your descendants I give this land, from the Wadie of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates….” (Genesis15:17–21; see also Jeremiah 34:18)

And because the physical dimensions of the Land are provided in this covenant, there can be no over-spiritualizing its meaning into some otherworldly spiritual realm.



A street in Old City of Jerusalem

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The word brit (covenant) carries a connotation of the shedding of blood. This is nothing unusual: even from the earliest of times, covenant agreements were often ratified by animal sacrifice or an exchange of blood.

Such a covenant is so binding that to break it would result in the death of the person who broke it and often the family as well.

Abraham, therefore, was following an ancient custom when he cut the three animals in two and placed them in such a way that the blood formed a pathway.

The two parties entering into this covenant would walk through the blood to confirm a covenant in which each party could lay claim to all the possessions of the other party.

But in the case of this covenant, only the smoking, burning Presence—a manifestation of God that is reminiscent of the pillar of fire that guided the Israelites through the wilderness centuries later—walked through the blood.

Why? Only God could establish this everlasting covenant, and the responsibility for maintaining it fell solely upon Him.

This was no mere contract that could be voided. It was an unconditional, eternal trust. This covenant is often referred to as the Abrahamic Covenant.



Orthodox Jewish children play at the Lions Fountain in 
Yemin Moshe, a Jerusalem neighborhood that 
overlooks the Old City.


Implied Covenants in the Garden of Eden

“The LORD God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them.” (Genesis 3:21)

The first covenant between man and God was probably made with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, and it did not involve the shedding of blood.

Though Genesis does not use the word covenant in regards to God’s conditional promises made to Adam, the prophet Hosea does refer to it as a covenant:

“As at Adam, they have broken the covenant; they were unfaithful to me there.” (Hosea 6:7)

Hosea seems to be speaking of God’s commands when he placed Adam in Gan Eden (Garden of Eden) to care for it:

“You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.” (Genesis 2:15)



El Mona Garden in Julis, a Druze village in the 
Galilee region of Israel

Perhaps the earliest example of a blood covenant can be traced to the time in the Garden when animals were first killed to provide clothing for Adam and Eve(Genesis 3:21).

This was the second covenant that God made with them.

Because Eve, and then Adam, succumbed to the temptation of the serpent, their connection with God was severed. They realized they were naked and tried to weave a garment of fig leaves to cover their shame.

In response, God promised to give the Messiah who would come to destroy the work of the serpent and restore the relationship between humankind and God.

The promise is worded in such a way as to infer that God would be intimately involved in the person of this promised Redeemer:

“And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike His heel.” (Genesis 3:15–16)

What followed is considered by some to be an implied covenant: the shedding of innocent blood to provide a covering that was necessary as a result of sin.



Noah's Ark, by Edward Hicks


Noahic Covenant

“Then God said to Noah and to his sons with him: … I establish my covenant with you: Never again will all life be destroyed by the waters of a flood; never again will there be a flood to destroy the earth.’” (Genesis 9:8–11)

The first covenant explicitly spoken of in the Bible is the covenant God made after the flood destroyed the earth.

It is unique in that God made it with all of humankind; and through this covenant, all of humanity is still in a covenant with God in which people are not permitted to eat blood or to commit murder (Genesis 9:4–6).

In this covenant, God promised to never again destroy the earth through a flood as he had during Noah’s time.

The sign that God gave Noah to seal this covenant is the rainbow (Genesis9:12–17).



A double rainbow over Petah Tikvah, which is about 
11 kilometers (7 miles) east of Tel Aviv.


Abrahamic Covenant

“I will establish my covenant as an everlasting covenant between me and you and your descendants after you for the generations to come, to be your God and the God of your descendants after you. The whole land of Canaan, where you now reside as a foreigner, I will give as an everlasting possession to you and your descendants after you; and I will be their God.” (Genesis 17:7–8)

In the Abrahamic Covenant, God promises Abraham the Land of Israel, descendants, and blessings. (Genesis 12:1–3)

“I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” (Genesis 12:1–3)

Understanding the Abrahamic Covenant is extremely important since it governs God's unique relationship with Israel, as well as His relationship with the nations.



Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) 
and Malta Prime Minister Dr. Joseph Muscat (left) 
at a recent meeting in Jerusalem.

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Each of the three aspects of the Abrahamic Covenant—land, descendants, and blessing— form a basis for three other covenants:

God’s promise of land is expanded with the Land Covenant(Deuteronomy 29:1–30:20).

“For I command you today to love the Lord your God, to walk in obedience to Him, and to keep His commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase, and the Lord your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess.” (Deuteronomy 30:16)

God’s promise of descendants is expanded with the Davidic Covenantand its promise of the coming King Messiah (2 Samuel 7:11–16; 1 Chronicles 17:10–14).

“I will set Him over My house and My kingdom forever; His throne will be established forever.” (1 Chronicles 17:14)

God’s promise of blessing is expanded through the New Covenant(Jeremiah 31:31-34).

“I will put My law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be My people. … they will all know Me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the LORD. For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more." (Jeremiah 31:33–34)



A Jewish man wears a tallit (prayer shawl) 
and tefillin (phylacteries) while he prays slichot 
(penitential poems and prayers).

As an eternal sign of His covenant with Abraham, God gave him the Brit Milah(Covenant of Circumcision) (Genesis 17:9–14).

The Brit Milah takes place with every Jewish male infant on the eighth day after birth.

This rite of circumcision is the vehicle through which every generation is able to enter into the covenant formed between God and Abraham.


The practice of wearing tefillin during weekday morning
prayer is based upon the Biblical injunction in Exodus
13:9, 16 and Deuteronomy 6:8, 11:18 to bind God's Word
on the arm and place it close to the heart.



The Mosaic Covenant

“Now if you obey me fully and keep My covenant, then out of all nations you will be My treasured possession. Although the whole earth is Mine, you will be for Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” (Exodus 19:5–6)

When God cut the Covenant of the Pieces with Abraham, He told Abraham that his descendants would be enslaved and mistreated for 400 years in a country that was not their own.

The Mosaic Covenant is the covenant that God made with the Israelites—Abraham’s descendants—at the end of this 400 year period, after He saved them from slavery in Egypt.

In this covenant, God separated the Israelites from the nations, making them a light for those nations—a kingdom of priests and a holy nation that serves the One True covenant-keeping God.

He gave His law to the Jewish People through Moses on Mount Sinai—laws that govern morality, the sacrificial system and the priesthood, and civil life.

To violate any one of these laws is to violate the Law as a whole.



Moses and the Ten Commandments,
by James Tissot


While the Abrahamic Covenant is unconditional, the Mosaic Covenant is conditional.

If Israel is obedient to this covenant, they will experience the blessings of this covenant, but if they are disobedient, they will experience its curses.

The blessings and curses that are associated with this conditional covenant are detailed in Deuteronomy 28.

This covenant reveals the absolute holiness of God and the sinfulness of mankind.

It is a continuous reminder to the Jewish People, indeed, all the nations, of our need for the Redeemer, the promised Messiah.


An Orthodox father and his children examine the 
world map near the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem.

As with other covenants, blood is involved. When Moses ratified the covenant with the Israelites, he sacrificed young bulls:

“Moses then took the blood, sprinkled it on the people and said, ‘This is the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you in accordance with all these words.’” (Exodus 24:8)

Furthermore, the covenant has a sacrificial system that provides a means of entering the presence of the righteous and holy God. This system also providescoverings (atonements) for the sins of the people of Israel.

While circumcision is the sign of the Abrahamic Covenant, the Sabbath can be considered the sign of the Mosaic Covenant (Exodus 31:12–18).

"Say to the Israelites, 'You must observe My Sabbaths. This will be a sign between me and you for the generations to come, so you may know that I am the LORD, who makes you holy.” (Exodus 31:13)



Foot traffic and street traffic stand in stark contrast in 
Jerusalem on a busy Shabbat (Saturday) afternoon, since 
starting a combustion engine on Shabbat is considered a 
violation of the Law of Moses by those who are observant.


The New Covenant

“‘Days are coming,’ declares the Lord, ‘when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah.’” (Jeremiah 31:3)

The New Covenant, which is a term that is only explicitly used once in the Tanakh (Old Testament) in Jeremiah 31:31–34, it is founded on covenant promises that came before it.

It fulfills the promise that God made in the Garden to Adam—that One would cometo crush the serpent’s head (Hebrews 2:14; 1 John 3:8; Colossians 2:15; Romans16:20) and restore an intimate relationship with the Holy God.

This promised One came through Abraham’s lineage under the Abrahamic Covenant.

Jeremiah states that the New Covenant will not be like the Mosaic Covenant of law that God made with the Israelites when He brought them out of Egypt, which they broke.

It is an unconditional covenant of grace given to Israel that is capable of transforming people from the inside out so that God’s laws are internalized and written on the heart—one in which His people can draw close to Him.



A woman prays at the Western Wall.

The New Covenant was ratified through Messiah’s sacrificial death on the Roman execution stake.

Whereas we were unable to keep the Mosaic Covenant, continually turning away from God and suffering the consequences, in the New Covenant, Yeshua alone has the ability to save those who put their faith in Him; this salvation cannot be attained by good works or by keeping the law or by anything other than faith in Him.

Moreover, He has provided the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit) to empower Believers to keep the covenant and receive an eternal inheritance.

“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast.” (Ephesians 2:8–9)

Many have argued that the New Covenant abolishes or replaces the Mosaic Covenant, but Yeshua said this was not so:

“Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.” (Matthew 5:17–19)




The New Covenant also does not end the Abrahamic Covenant, but is a measure for carrying out the blessings purposed in it.

In fulfillment of the blessings that the Abrahamic Covenant would bring to the nations(Galatians 3:14), those who put their faith in Yeshua (Jesus) are grafted into the olive tree of Israel.

“You, though a wild olive shoot, have been grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing sap from the olive root.” (Romans 11:17)

After all, God promised Abraham that he would be “the father of many nations” (Genesis 17:3).




Through the New Covenant, God has brought all the pieces together that are necessary for the realization of the coming Kingdom that Yeshua promised.

And when Yeshua returns, the full power of the New Covenant will be seen both here in Israel and around the world.

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"My servant David will be king over them, and they will all have one shepherd. They will follow my laws and be careful to keep my decrees. They will live in the land I gave to my servant Jacob, the land where your ancestors lived. They and their children and their children's children will live there forever, and David My Servant will be their prince forever." (Ezekiel 37:24–25)

Benny Hinn's Ministry Changed After Reconciling With Wife (Many marriages need help.)


Benny Hinn
Benny Hinn
Benny Hinn is a man on a mission. Since God has healed his message, there’s a new twist to his ministry—praying for the healing of troubled marriages around the world. Charisma News asked Hinn about this new facet of his ministry and the fruit it’s bearing in nations around the world.

Charisma: Has your message changed at all?

Hinn: No, not really. I mean, I've always preached healing, but I'm focusing very much so on salvation. Well, I do three things now at the meeting. Of course, in the first part, I focus on salvation because I always want to see people saved at first before I administer, and the altar calls are always packed. I focus on family healing. In South Africa, 50 percent of the crowd came down in a church of 11,000. Think about it—that many people actually walked down whose marriages were breaking up or on the verge of breaking up.

I was stunned in Madrid. The first night, I asked those that were having marriage troubles to come down. The pastor just looked at me in shock. A stadium packed, and a third of them came down. There’s lot of people in the body of Christ suffering like this, families just broken or breaking up.

I think Suzanne's and my healing has just had some impact. I go through my situation. My marriage was a whole lot worse than I can even talk about. And I say to people, "You think yours is bad. Mine is probably way worse than you could ever imagine. Again, God healed Sue and I. And if God healed us, He'll heal you."

It's stunning. You see them come down, and they start sobbing and crying almost instantly because the pain is so deep in them. I never dealt with that part of ministry in the past with couples and homes and families. I identify with them. They identify with me. It moved me so deeply to tears.


One lady cried so bad, I think she almost fainted, that poor thing. The pain in them starts coming out. The minute they walk down the aisle, before you get the chance to even pray for them or talk to them, they're already crying, many of them. And then you go down and comfort them and put your hand on their shoulders and minister to them.


I’ve looked at many of them and said, "Now, you look at me," and I took them by the cheeks. I lifted their faces because they were bowed with such sorrow. I said, "God did it for me. He'll do it for you. Please believe it." People want to believe it, but it's something hard for them to believe, [that] God can really do it for them. And it's been an amazing eye-opener anyway for me and Suzanne.

Charisma: What do you think is causing so much trouble in Christian families?

Hinn: That's a great, great question. Sue and I have thought of doing a conference for people with family troubles. I want to learn more about it to help them. I don't know what's going on with other people. In my case, it was family and the stress of ministry and being too busy. I didn't pay attention to Suzanne's pain. That's what caused our problem. And then Suzanne having to struggle with what was happening to our family—and you know that story.

In South Africa, people were just weeping everywhere because Suzanne opened up. She said, "Listen, here's what I went through. Here's what I was on. Here are the drugs I did. Here's what Benny did." And then I opened up and said, "So, here's what I did. Here's what I ignored. Here's what I should have not ignored."

And at some point, people laughed and they cried. And we talked for about a good half-hour. A lot of healing took place as we were talking, as they saw we were being transparent. That made them comfortable—that we were ourselves with them and didn't hide anything.

And finally I said to the crowd in Africa, "Now, we were honest with you. Now you have to be honest with each other and yourselves: What is it that has caused your problem?" This is so powerful because they see the love between me and Sue. We're holding on to each other. Suzanne is kissing on me. She's loving on me on the platform, and people see it's real, that it's not phony stuff, that we're not acting. This is real up there.

Then I said, "Now, you tell each other now that you will fix it. Just like we have, you will." And they stop crying and say, "We will fix it. We will fix it." And it's just powerful. Really, it makes you cry. You just stand there, you know. You just think, "Oh, my God! I can't believe I'm seeing this."


Benny Hinn: The Anointing Is Still in Operation

Benny Hinn
Benny Hinn









Healing evangelist Benny Hinn is back with a passion. After restoring his marriage, Hinn is once again traveling the world—this time with his wife, Suzanne—and holding crusades where miracles are manifesting.
 
Charisma News caught up with Hinn to get the latest report from the field.
 
Charisma: I hear God is restoring your ministry.
 
Hinn: The ministry is coming back. The anointing is still in operation. People are seeing that. 
 
Number two, they are coming because of the deep hurt, deep pain, deep need. Sickness is still there. And thirdly, I think they come because they say, "OK, the Lord has done something for him. We're happy for him and Suzanne." They want to support this, and they show up. 

So, it's been very exciting. I don't know what the future holds, but we're all excited about it, and I'm happy to see the Lord do it. This is real. Sue and I have never been happier.
 
Charisma: You’ve been ministering in packed-out auditoriums around the world these days. What’s going on there?
 
Hinn: Well, since my remarriage I have seen an upsurge. The crowds have come back in most places, especially in the Far East. I was in Manado, Indonesia, in July. We had 200,000 people show up for the crusade. I have not seen crowds like that in three years. It was stunning. 

We were only expecting 80,000. They told my team it was the largest crowd they have had—ever—in that part of Indonesia. I was in Madrid last week; the stadium was jammed. People were just ecstatic.  
 
There just seems to be a lot of excitement out there about my reunion to Suzanne. It's just a very, very exciting time in our lives. Sue and I are doing incredibly, marvelously glorious. Really, I've not had such contentment in my life. It’s like this is our time of peace and recovery. I think sometimes when somebody is healed, it heals everything else around them.
 
Charisma: Tell us about the miracles in London.
 
Hinn: I was in London at Westminster and rented the Westminster Hall across from Parliament. It was jammed out. It was magnificent. While I was in London, three miracles stood out which were just so amazing. One girl—I'll be showing it on TV in two weeks—was flown in from Pakistan with three holes in her heart and crippled. God healed her. 

Two friends in their '60s who were born deaf were both healed. And it just stunned the crowd. It actually stunned me more than anyone else, I think. My son is now working with me. During the divorce, I saw him become so angry and bitter. 

And there he was last week, standing, crying and worshipping God on the platform as he saw the miracles and was helping his daddy. It's a precious thing to see your family healed also when God heals you.
 
Charisma: What’s next for Benny Hinn?
 
Hinn: Doors are swinging open. I'm going to China, by the way, if you can believe it. I've been invited to preach in two cities, Shanghai and Guangzhou, in January. India has opened up big. I'm going to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in December, and they're expecting massive crowds. 

And Africa. Dear God! The invitations I'm getting now for Africa can keep me there probably the whole year. So it's like a resurrection, a resurgence. I'm beginning to do some big meetings again in the U.S. I don't know that I'll ever go back to the stadiums because it's very, very expensive. But I am doing convention halls and centers. In fact, I'm coming to Orlando to the convention center early next year.

More: CharismaNews

The Secret to Intimacy With God


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The Secret to Intimacy With God


(Brandon Johnson/creationswap.com)
It is not hard to recognize someone who has spent extended time at a newsstand: His conversation overflows with the drama of current affairs. And it is not hard to discern a person who has come from a sporting event, as his face reveals the outcome of the game. Likewise, people can tell when an individual has spent extended time seeking God. An imperturbable calm guards his heart, and his countenance is radiant with light, as with the morning dew of heaven.
Beloved, to seek and find God is everything. It is to our shame that in our era church services do not focus more on actually seeking God. Yes, we do honor God and thank Him for what He has done. We hear a sermon and perhaps enjoy a time of fellowship with others. Yet only rarely do we depart a congregational meeting with the fire of eternity reflecting off our faces. Instead we fill up with information about God without actually drawing near to Him. Most of us are largely unaware of God’s presence.
While we rightly need church programs, fellowship and times for ministry training, we must not assume that religious indoctrination is the same thing as actually seeking God. And while I am often blessed listening to contemporary Christian music, even godly entertainment is no substitute for my own worship encounter with God.
Therefore let us ask ourselves: Is there a place and a time set apart in our spiritual lives where we can give ourselves to seeking God? What is the Spirit of God actually desired to manifest Himself during our worship service? Would the Lord have to wait until we finished our scheduled program? I respect and recognize the need for order; we need the scheduled times for announcements and the defined purposes that currently occupy Sunday mornings, but have we made room for God Himself?
When we first determine to draw near to God, it may seem we have little to show for our efforts. Yet be assured: Even the thought of seeking God is a step toward our transformation. Still, we often do not notice the early signs of our spiritual renewal—for as we grow increasingly more aware of God, we simultaneously grow increasingly less aware of ourselves. Though we may not see that we are changing, others certainly will.
Consider the experience of Moses. The Lord’s servant had ascended Mount Sinai and there stood before the living God. The eyes of Moses were actually filled with God’s sun-like glory; his ears actually heard the audible sound of the Lord’s voice. Yet when Moses returned to the people, the Bible says he “did not know that the skin of his face shone” (Ex. 34:29). When the Israelites saw the fire of God’s glory on the face of Moses, “they were afraid to come near him” (v. 30). They saw he had been with God.
The church needs more people who have, like Moses, climbed closer to the Almighty—people who have stood in the sacred fire of God’s presence. Instead we exhaust ourselves arguing over peripheral doctrines or styles of music in our song services. Perhaps there are benefits to constantly debating the nuances of our doctrines, but are we not more truly thirsting for the reality of God?
What happens when we seek God? The Bible says at the very moment we are drawing near to Him, the living presence of God Himself is drawing near to us (see James 4:8). Help is coming, redemption for our situation is on its way, strength will soon be arriving, and the powers of healing are activated.
But, we may argue, what if we seek Him and He does not come near? Fear not, He will. He may not manifest as we supposed, but He will come.
Our goal is to—day by day—draw nearer to God. He has commanded that we come boldly to His throne of grace. To receive the help we need, we must arrive at His throne. Remember also that our confidence comes from Christ Himself. He promises, “For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened” (Matt. 7:8).
We are seeking a lifetime of increasing devotion, though it may certainly begin in a season of drawing near. In spite of natural and spiritual obstacles, as we persevere, the Lord assures us, “How much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask Him!” (v.11).
If we do not cease seeking and knocking, we will discover unfolding degrees of intimacy with God. Even now, He’s drawing near. The Lord promises, “Everyone who … seeks finds.”
I Will Be Found By YouAdapted from I Will Be Found by You by Francis Frangipane, copyright 2013, published by Passio from Charisma House. In forty-three years of seeking after God, the author has learned that it is in seeking God that we actually find Him. This book contains a collection of his best writings on the subject. It will encourage you to pursue the Lord and reap the reward of finding Him. To order your copy click here
PRAYER POWER FOR THE WEEK OF 10/28/13
 This week make it a priority to seek God’s transforming presence with worship, meditation and prayer. Set a time and put aside all distractions that would divert your attention away from Him. Let Him speak to you from His Word and thank Him for the promise that if you seek Him you will find Him. Once you’ve spent time enjoying His presence and giving Him worship, expand your prayer to include those who need salvation, revival and provision. Ask Him to direct your steps where you can be a blessing to those in need. Continue to pray for global revival and for more laborers for His harvest fields. Lift up our government leaders and pray that they will seek the Lord’s guidance to govern. Remember Israel and the persecuted church. Matt. 7:7-8; Ps. 9:10
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Poems by Eva Haglund


A CHILD WITHOUT A PARENT …
Anyone without God and hope in the world -
 is like  a diamond who has been dropped..
is  like  a newborn foal without a mother…
is like a child leave hold of the hand of a mother or father…
who do not have the heavenly Bread-
who do not have Bread of life –Jesus…
We need to give  the Bread from heaven…
He gave his Bread-he gave his life…
The bread was divided in pieces like his heart was crushed
in love and pain for us
He gave everything for us…
He gave his heart…

Eva Haglund


LIFE OF BREAD –JESUS

 In John.6:35 you can read that Jesus is the Bread of life. Our heavenly Daddy sent the Bread from heaven. The Bread was made in heaven. It was a heavenly Bread. The world did not have Bread.  God wanted to give the world “food”. We need usual bread. We also Life of Bread . If we do not have this Bread we will die. Without receiving Jesus we will not survive – we need the Bread –Jesus in our lives.  

We can think that we as we can be hungry and want usual bread can be hungry after Jesus –more of Jesus. Matt.5 :3 –we shall be hungry after more of God – not thinking we have “got” it or “have” anything. To learn to know Jesus is like to know a sea. It never ends. He is like the sea… To know him is reaching to a level of heaven as is above the sea. He is so big, so we do not understand it! Jesus is the Bread-The Bread of life =The Word. 

As we need usual bread every day we need Bread of life =the Word-every day. It is our daily Bread. I want more food today –I want the heavenly Bread –the Word. The Word is like a golden mine –heavenly gold.
The Word is like heavenly gold. The Word is Jesus. He is love. The heavenly gold is love. Jesus is love –the Word is a book –“Love” I think. It is like a mine of diamonds you also can say I think full of heavenly diamonds.
The Bread is fantastic –like a golden Bread or a bread of diamonds if you think about the value. Jesus eat bread with people-he ate together as in Acts.2:46. He share his bread.To eat together I think also can mean fellowship. Jesus had fellowship with people talking –eating together. John.17:21. 
Jesus wants the love in Body of Christ to be a testimony to the world. Jesus gave bread to the poor-he shared. James. 1:15-17, Acts.2:44-46. Sisters and broters in the Lord can give our”bread” to each other –different gifts .We need each other in friendship guided by God 1 Kor.12 not just in the churchbuildings.
You can  also have friends in other churches as God wants or has brought to gether if he want.
“The bread” can be shared between churches –gifts. Maybe also usual bread  and maybe help each other financial? The love between Christians Jesus wants to be a testimony to the world.
John.6:51. Jesus gave bread to others . He gave his Bread. He gave his life.
The Bread gave the world life. The world need bread. They need Bread –The Bread of life.
A bread who never get too old –always is fresh. A living Bread – Bread of life.
Jesus is love – the Bread –Love . I am thinking  that to give a piece of bread can be to to give love.
A symbol for love is a heart. The bread was divided in pieces like his heart was crushed in love and pain for us. He gave his heart. 
Bread of life – a bread of love.
He is love.
Eva Haglund

 

JESUS IN FLAMES OF FIRE -FOR YOU

You said – “ I was walking at pieces of glass.”
His back was scourged until blood because he loves you so much.
You said - “ My path was full of thorns “ –
He carried the crown of thorns for you…
You said “ - I felt alone in the burning sun” -
He was abandoned by the Father in deepest pain for you…
You said “ People were laughing at me –and treated me like nothing…”
He was nailed for you…
The pain he felt has no one felt…
He gave everything –the King of all Kings – a servant in love for you …
His love conquered the death...
 He died for you…
Isaiah 53.

Eva Haglund