Years ago I heard Sir Steve Redgrave talk about his decision to return to rowing for one final gold medal. They started their preparation when he and Matthew Pinsent made the hard decision that their previous best performance from the last Olympics would not be good enough to win gold in the next. They needed to get better.
As God moves in His Church, we need to recognise that we need to improve and in many cases we need to repent. Matthew writes about Jesus starting his ministry, “From that time on Jesus began to preach, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near’”. It was a Kairos moment – Jesus moves into a new season, the waiting was over.
We believe it is a Kairos moment for our nation, the waiting has stopped. It is time to change. Jesus tells the people of Israel to turn from sin and turn to God. His message starts with His people. The Old Testament refers to repentance over 1000 times; again it is primarily a call to God’s own people. They use the Hebrew word shuv, which means to turn around. Jesus uses the Greek word metanoia meaning a change of mind, or re-think.
God is challenging us to go deeper with Him. We were with a group of national prayer leaders recently. God told us we needed a deeper understanding of the work of the cross in our lives. We need to truly die to ourselves if we are to move to deep oneness with Jesus. I know I have a range of ‘old me’ issues that need crucifying and God is saying “it is time”. We need to move to a new level. We repent by turning away from what is holding us back and turning to Jesus so we can run the race (or row the boat) He has set before us. Here are five specific turn away challenges.
Turn from fear - many of us carry fears. They may be fears of what others will think, fears around our finances, fears about doing things in public etc. None of these fears are from Jesus, He gives us wisdom. They are holding us back – it is time to turn.
Turn from disunity - we can often embrace disunity. We criticise this person, fall out with another, we stand on our high horse, or don’t like that person’s theology. In short we can be very judgemental and it is time to turn.
Turn from unbelief – we can all fall into the disbelief trap. We may have prayed for things where we saw no change and the enemy loves to tell us it is a waste of time to pray for healing, for this person to come to the Lord, for our church to see a deep move of God. The enemy imprisons us with lies which undermine our faith. We need to be free of these lies - it is time to turn.
Turn from prayerlessness – this can be a huge challenge for people of prayer because we look at wrong measures. It is easy to find people who pray less that you, with less faith, with less standing on the Word of God and that makes us think “I’m not doing too badly really”. We need to keep pushing ourselves on, in particular to go deeper with Jesus with a prayer life inspired by Him and filled with the things on His heart. It is time to turn.
Turn from sin – from our wicked ways. Galatians 5:16 – 26 gives us a good starting point. Paul says the works of the flesh are plain to see – anger, selfishness, jealousy etc. We live in a corrupting world where so many temptations are thrown at us it is easy to lose our moral compass. John Wesley and friends set up a Holy Club with a self-audit asking questions like “Am I honest in all my acts and words, or do I exaggerate?” We need to ask God to highlight our sins, bring them into the open that we can pray for change. It is time to turn.
Repentance and turning start with us because we should be the very first people to give testimony to God’s wonderful mercy and freedom.
Steve Botham, Director World Prayer Centre