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Impossible with Man

9/13/2020

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These last few weeks we have been looking at the life of Peter and how his life was transformed as he surrendered his life of self to Jesus. Like Peter we can deceive ourselves into believing we have it all together until we meet Jesus face to face and He says; as He did to the rich young ruler, "You still lack one thing. Sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me." We are told that the young man went away sorrowful. It was then that Jesus turned to His disciples and said, "How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God!" The disciples could not believe their ears, and responded, "Who then can be saved?" And it is a good question - do any of us really have a chance of being saved? It is a question that I have struggled with, and I bet you have as well. That's why I'm so thankful that Jesus doesn't leave it there, but goes on to say in Luke 18:27 "What is impossible with man is possible with God." 
In this simple passage we find two significant thoughts. First: salvation and us following Jesus and therefore living a holy life is an utter impossibility. 
Second: what we can never accomplish on our own is completely possible if Jesus is living in us and through us. 
And these are the two greatest lessons we can learn in our Christian life! For me it took many years and I still struggle with this simple truth, that in my walk with Jesus I can do nothing. That my salvation is a complete impossibility for me. And when I get this lesson right, which I do for periods of time. Then the second lesson seems to be just as big of a challenge. And that is that I must surrender every part of my life to Jesus and let Him truly come in and live. If we can learn these two lessons our walk with Jesus is one of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, 
faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Every other aspect of our walk with Jesus falls into place. 
Not only understanding, but truly accepting that we cannot live a righteous life in the self life; and that it only happens if we allow the Holy Spirit to fill us with Jesus is the only way we will ever have the assurance of salvation and have the Fruits of the Spirit fill our lives. Anything short of complete surrender and allowing the Holy Spirit to fill us with Jesus is just a show. It is dry bones! It is a waste of effort and we are living out the the message to the Laodicean Church. "We are lukewarm...rich, and do not need a thing." Unfortunately we know the rest of the message to the Laodicean Church. "But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked." These two lessons in Luke 18:27 are vitally important for us to understand and apply in our lives. 
Next week I want to look at why man cannot and then the next week we will look at God can. And I hope you will not just skim over these studies. Understanding these simple truths are crucial to our salvation and our lives being filled with Jesus!

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Peter- Transformed

8/30/2020

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Last time we looked at Peter's Repentance and what it took to prepare Peter for deliverance from self. Just a short while later we see Peter on the day of Pentecost preaching boldly and publicly by the leading of the Holy Spirit. Peter was truly a changed man. Peter's whole nature was changed! What Jesus started in the life of Peter with that look, was perfected when he was filled with the Holy Spirit. This is where we see Peter Transformed. 
Just weeks before we saw Peter deny his Lord in spite of his insistence that he would never deny Jesus. In this Peter showed how little he knew himself, and yet in 1 Peter he writes, "If you are insulted because of the name of Christ, you are blessed, for the Spirit of glory and of God rest on you." this is not the old Peter that we see! This is the very Spirit of Jesus breathing and speaking through him. But he doesn't stop there, "But rejoice in as much as you participate in the suffering of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed." This is not the same Peter at all! 
I encourage you friends, to truly look at the life of Peter and see a man utterly changed! The self-pleasing, the self-seeking the trusting in self is gone! Peter was filled with the Spirit and the life of Jesus. He was filled with the Holy Spirit and Peter was a brand new man. Peter's story has to be the story of everyone of us who truly want to be crucified with Jesus and have Him living in our lives. Peter's life teaches us a couple lessons that I would like to briefly consider. 
The first lesson: We can be earnest, godly, devoted believers and still have the power of self very strong in our lives. 
This is a sobering, scary thought to me! Just shortly before Peter denied Jesus, he had cast out devils and healed the sick; and yet the power of self, the love for self caused him to betray his Lord. Dear Church Family we must realize that even though we love our Lord. Even tough we honestly desire to live for Jesus; it is possible that the self-life in us can keep the power of God from doing the mighty work that He so much wants to do. Our God wants more than anything else to double and triple His blessing. He wants to give us ten times the blessing we have allowed Him to give us so far! 
We have talked about Peter's pride; we talk of how impetuous he was. How self-confident he was. And it all came down to one thing, self! Jesus said, "Deny self." Peter didn't get it, and every failing he had came from that! 
Andrew Murray puts it this way, "What a solemn thought, and what an urgent plea for us to cry: O God, do discover this to us, that none of us may be living the self-life! It has happened to many a one who had been a Christian for years, who had perhaps occupied a prominent position, that God found him out and taught him to find himself out, and he became utterly ashamed, falling down broken before God. Oh, the bitter shame and sorrow and pain and agony that came to him, until at last he found that there was deliverance! Peter went out and wept bitterly, and there may be many a godly one in whom the power of the flesh still rules." Absolute Surrender page 56 
As I have read through the life of Peter I am convicted that these words are talking about me. That I must allow the Holy Spirit to fill my life with Jesus, as I have not allowed Him to do up to now. I am ashamed to admit it, but transparency trumps shame every time! 
The second lesson: It is the work of our lovely Savior Jesus through the Holy Spirit to root out the self-life. 
How was it that the self-willed, self-loving Peter became the courageous Peter of Pentecost and the writer of first and second Peter? It was because Peter allowed Jesus to take control of his life. It started with that look of love at his betrayal of Jesus and Peter was broken and wept bitterly. It then continued throughout the rest of Peter's life. 
And the beautiful, lovely Jesus who led Peter to Pentecost is waiting to take charge of our lives if we are willing to surrender our self-life, our self- comfort, our self-pleasing and self-will to Him! 
Let me close with Andrew Murray's answer: "It is Christ Jesus who can rid you of it; none else but Christ Jesus can give deliverance from the power of self. And what does He ask you to do? He ask that you should humble yourself before Him."

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Peter Repentance

8/2/2020

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So far we have looked at “Peter the Devoted Disciple of Jesus”, and “Peter Living the Life of Self.” This week we will consider Peter's Repentance. 
Peter denied Jesus three times in a fashion that makes us cringe when we read the story. I am so thankful the story doesn't end there, but tells us that Jesus looked at Peter; and it was that look of love and forgiveness that broke the heart of Peter. He saw his awful sin and failure and just how far he had fallen, and "Peter went out and wept bitterly." 
Can you imagine the shame during those next few hours as Peter watched Jesus be hung on a cross and buried in a tomb. I wish I could tell you that I have no idea what he went through, but I have denied my Savior so many times, and put Jesus back on that cross more times then I even want to admit. If we are honest, each of us have been there and hurt our Lord and Savior. We have had a Sabbath like Peter experienced of despair and shame; wishing it could have been different! 
We have been there! "My Lord is gone, my hope is gone, and I denied my Lord. After that life of love, after that blessed fellowship of three years, I denied my Lord. God have mercy upon me!" Absolute Surrender page 53 
I am not sure I can fully realize just how far Peter fell, but I have been there! The other side of this story is that this was the turning point in Peter's life. The next day on resurrection morning Peter received the news that the tomb was empty. That evening he met with the other disciples. Then by the sea Jesus asked Peter: "Do you love me?" Three times, Jesus reminded him that he had denied Him just as many times. 
Even now, I am reminded how many times I have denied my Lord! The beauty is that it was at this time that Peter began his transformation. And Jesus promises that He will, and is transforming our lives so that we can say, 
"Lord you know that I love you!"

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Peter Living the Self Life

7/6/2020

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Last week we looked into the life of Peter the Devoted Disciple of Jesus. We saw that Peter was a man of surrender - he gave up everything he had for Jesus and yet something was still missing. 
You remember that right after Jesus had said to Peter; "Flesh and blood has not revealed it unto you, but your Father which is in heaven," Speaking of Peters belief that Jesus was the Son of God. Jesus then went on to speak about the suffering He would go through and Peter dared to call Jesus down: "Be it far from thee, lord; this shall not be unto thee." It was then that Jesus had to call Peter down: "Get thee behind me, Satan; for thou savorest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men." 
This was Peter trusting in himself! Trusting his own wisdom and actually telling the Savior that He can't go and die. Peter was a man of absolute surrender. Peter was a man ready to obey and submit his life to Jesus. He was a man of faith to the point he trusted Jesus to step out of a boat and walk on water. Peter had spiritual insight, so that he saw Jesus as the Son of God and yet Peter trusted in himself and his wisdom. Just shortly after this we see Peter right in the middle of a squabble with the other disciples, about who would be the greatest in Jesus kingdom. He wanted to be number one! He wanted to be in control and believed that it was his right to be first and best. He desired his own honor above others. Peter's life of self was strong! He gladly left his vocation and old life, but not his old self. 
When Jesus spoke of His suffering and said to Peter: "Get behind me, Satan" He went on to say: "If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me." Friends we cannot follow 
Jesus until we are willing to put others before ourself. Self must be utterly denied. What does that mean for you and me? 
When Peter denied Jesus, we read in God's word that he did it three times; "I do not know the man" ; he was saying, "I have nothing to do with Him - He and I are not friends; I have no connection to Him." Jesus told Peter that he must deny self. Self had to be ignored, it had to be rejected. This is what true discipleship is all about; but Peter did not understand and could not obey it. And then what did we see happen? Jesus said to him, "Before the cock crows twice you will deny me three times." Do you remember peters response? "Though all should forsake you I will not. I am ready to go with you, to prison and death." 
Peter meant every word of that! He intended to do just what he said; but Peter did not know himself. He did not believe he was as bad as Jesus said he was. 
All of us can probably think of individual sins that come between us and Jesus, but what are we going to do with the self-life which if we are honest with ourselves is all filthy and is our very nature? What are we going to do with our flesh that is often under the power of sin? What are we going to do with our spirit to have to be in control and have it our way? What we need friends Is deliverance! Peter didn't have a clue of his true self and his self-confidence denied his Lord. It is either God's way or ours; it is either self or Jesus! 
Notice that Jesus uses the word deny twice. He says to Peter the first time, "Deny self" ; then the second time, "You will deny me." It is one or the other, this is the only choice we have; we must either deny self or deny Jesus. We are in the middle of the Great Controversy - two great powers are at war! There is the self-nature which is the power of sin, and there is Jesus which is the power of God. One or the other must rule in our life. 
It was self that caused the most beautiful angel in heaven to become Satan, because he wanted to exalt self. Self was the reason for the fall of man. Adam and Eve wanted something for themselves. We have inherited their nature and like them we must choose between Jesus and ourself. Are we in control or is Jesus? Does it have to be our way, or do we put others first as Jesus did? 
If you took the challenge to read through the gospels this year, you are in for a great blessing! I encourage you not to shy away from this challenge just because it may be difficult. God has a wonderful blessing in store for you!

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Peter the Devoted Disciple of Jesus

6/29/2020

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Last week we began a study on the life of Peter and how his life relates to our surrender and walk with Jesus. This week we will look at Peter the Devoted Disciple of Jesus. 
You remember that Jesus called Peter to give up his life and livelihood of fishing and follow Him. Peter never hesitated and could later say, "We have forsaken all and followed you." Peter was a man of absolute surrender; he gave up everything to follow Jesus and was ready to obey at a moments notice. When Jesus said, "Launch out into the deep, and let down the net." 
Peter didn't hesitate. He knew that there were no fish there, they had been working all night and caught nothing; even so Peter said to Jesus, "At your word I will let down the net." Peter in spite of what he thought or believed submitted his will to Jesus. And Peter was a man of great faith. When he saw Jesus walking on the sea, he immediately said, "Lord, if it is you, bid me come unto you"; and when Jesus said come, he stepped out of the boat and walked on water. 
Peter was also a man of great spiritual insight. When Jesus asked the disciples: "Whom do you say that I am?" Peter answered without hesitation, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Peter couldn't see that on his own, he saw it because the Holy Spirit told him it was so. And Jesus called him the rock, having the keys of the kingdom. Peter was a splendid man and devoted disciple of Jesus. If Peter was living today, 
we would say that he was an advanced Christian. And yet Peter was not even converted according to Jesus. 
This gives me pause as I look at my life, and I have to ask myself: am I an advanced Christian or am I like Peter wanting and in need of a conversion? I hope each of us are willing to carefully consider the life of Peter, and like Peter allow our hearts to be broken and filled with Jesus!

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Peter

6/21/2020

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We are living in uncertain times that are unprecedented in my lifetime. But I want to remind you that we are safe in the hands of a Savior who loved us so much He was willing to leave the safety and joy of Heaven so He could come to our dark world to give us direction and Hope. Regardless of what comes we are in the hands of a God who loves us and has promised He will never leave us. Keep your eyes on Jesus! 
We have been looking at Surrender and how it relates to our Walk With Jesus for the last couple months and I want to continue in that vein, just with a little different focus. This week and for the next four weeks we are going to be looking at the life of Peter and how his repentance relates to Surrender and specifically to our walk with Jesus. 
Let's start with a Bible passage from Luke 22:61, 62 
"And the Lord turned and looked at Peter. Then Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had said to him, “Before the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times.” So Peter went out and wept bitterly." This is where everything changed in the life of Peter. Peter was not in any condition to follow Jesus at this time, because he had not come to the end of his rope; he did not know who he really was and could not follow Jesus. It was only when his heart was broken and he wept bitterly that the change came. Jesus had told Peter: "When you are converted, strengthen your brethren." This is that crucial moment when he is converted from self to Jesus. 
I praise God for the story of Peter. His story gives me more comfort than any other story in the Bible. When I consider his character with all of his 
failures, and what Jesus did for Peter through the power of the Holy Spirit, it thrills my heart, because there's hope for me, and there's hope for you. 
But we must remember, before Jesus could fill Peter with the Holy Spirit and make him that "new creation" that we find in 2 Corinthians 5:17, he had to go out and weep bitterly; he had to be humbled and so do we. 
If we are going to understand this clearly I believe there are four points that we need to look at. Over the next four weeks we are going to look at Peter the Devoted Disciple of Jesus; next, Peter Living the Life of Self; then, Peter's Repentance; and last, Peter Transformed. 
This will be an exciting study so I hope you are willing to take the time to read each part of Peter's life! 
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Honoring the Holy Spirit

5/26/2020

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Friends, we are safe in the hands of Jesus! Nothing that is happening has escaped His notice and I’m here to assure you He has everyone of us safely in his hands. 
We have been looking at surrender and most recently the Holy Spirit and how surrender to the Holy Spirit impacts our walk with Jesus! And what a wonderful blessing comes when the Holy Spirit is allowed to lead and direct our lives and our Church, and when it is expressed in our obedience to Him. 
We have been reflecting on the story of Barnabas and Paul when they were sent out as missionaries. What great and miraculous power went with them as they were directed by the Holy Spirit. It was the Holy Spirit that hindered Paul from going again into Asia and led him to Europe. And the reason they had such great power; and miracles followed them everywhere they went, was because they were being led by the Holy Spirit. I am so thankful that this gift of the Holy Spirit was not just for the early church and these missionaries alone. No! We too can have this great blessing and be led step by step and see the same results in our ministry today! 
The Holy Spirit has been called "the executive of the Holy Trinity." The Holy Spirit not only has power that is readily available to us, but He offers the Spirit of love for each other and a dark world that needs Jesus just as much as you and me. We may look around us and say, "why don't we see more of that love that not only loves those that love us, but loves just as passionately those that hate and abuse us?" This is what we saw in the early disciples - unwavering love for those that wanted them dead! And 
why don't we see more of that kind of love? Why are we not blessed and led like these early missionaries? There can only be one answer. We have not honored the Holy Spirit as we should have done. I know these are not soft, sweet words, but can we say it's not true? Our cry should be: 
"God forgive me that I have not honored the Holy Spirit as I should have done, that I have grieved Him, that I have allowed self and the flesh and my own will to work where the Holy Spirit should have been honored! May God forgive me that I have allowed self and flesh and the will actually to have the place that God wanted the Holy Spirit to have." Absolute Surrender page 48. 
Friends we are weak and feeble, where God through our surrender to the Holy Spirit wants to give us love and power! That's what I want and pray for you and me. Will you pray this prayer with me?

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The Holy Spirit In Our Lives

5/11/2020

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We are so very blessed that our surrender to Jesus not only allows the Holy Spirit to separate us and set us apart for the glory of God, but the Holy Spirit doesn't stop there. The next work of the Holy Spirit in our lives is to make us partners! 
This is where our lives really get exciting in our surrender and walk with Jesus! As partners with the Holy Spirit Heaven does the bigger part of the work and we are privileged to do our small part as well. 
Going back to Acts 13; talking again of Barnabas and Paul, "So they, being sent forth by the Holy Ghost, departed unto Seleucia." Oh, what fellowship! Working together with the Holy Spirit to glorify God! This is when this partnership calls us to even greater prayer and fasting. We have been called to walk with Jesus; by our surrender we have been set apart, now is when we must fall on our faces and continually call on God for leading and strength. 
Here we see that it is not only in the beginning of our walk with Jesus that we are totally dependent, but every step of the way we must seek our Lord in prayer. If there is one part of God's Church that troubles my heart; if there is one part of my own life that I am ashamed; if there is one thing that we as a Church have not fully grasped. It is the wonderful power that God 
wants to give us through prayer! We have barely scratched the surface of what God wants to do in our lives through prayer! 
Many of us have read Bunyan's book Pilgrims Progress. In this great work of literature we find that Christian has the key that can unlock the dungeon of atheism and heartendom and it is prayer. Then there's possibly my favorite statement about prayer in Steps To Christ page 94 by Ellen White; 
"Why should the sons and daughters of God be reluctant to pray, when prayer is the key in the hand of faith to unlock heaven's storehouse, where are treasured the boundless resources of Omnipotence?" But somehow we are more occupied with our work than with prayer. For some reason we are more occupied with speaking to men than we are with speaking with God. 
The Holy Spirit is calling us to a new fasting and praying, to a new separation from the pleasures of this world. To a greater and more complete surrender to Jesus; and this can only come with fasting and prayer. If there was more prayer in our work for Jesus, there would be more blessing and devotion in our walk with Jesus! 
Andrew Murray in his book Absolute Surrender puts it this way, 
"If we felt and proved and testified to the world that our only strength lay in keeping every minute in contact with Christ, every minute allowing God to work in us - if that were our spirit, would not, by the grace of God, our lives be holier? Would not they be more abundantly fruitful?" AS page 46 
Paul in chapter three of Galatians in verse three says, "Having begun in the Spirit, are you now being made perfect by the flesh?" 
It is very easy in our walk with Jesus to begin with much prayer, begun in the Spirit, but then over time become more and more comfortable, more and more dependent in trusting in our own intelligence and strength instead of going to Jesus for every need and desire. 
Friends, this is our greatest and most important work! The Holy Spirit only comes in answer to our believing prayer.

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Seperated Unto The Spirit

4/7/2020

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We have been studying the part of the Holy Spirit in our surrender. Last time we looked at how fasting and prayer was essential in our receiving the Holy Spirit. This week I want to focus on what the Holy Spirit wants to do for us. 
Going back to Acts 13 "Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them. The work is mine, and I care for it, and I have chosen these men and called them, and I want you who represent the Church of Christ upon earth to set them apart unto me." 
We see two distinct sides to these verses. These men were set apart to the Holy Spirit and the Church was to do this separating work. The Holy Spirit could trust Barnabas and Saul to do His work in a right spirit. Jesus was dwelling in their lives! And the Church was abiding in Christ; so the Holy Spirit could say to them, "Do the work of separating these men." 
This is the key to our every need as Christian workers who need greater power and blessings to reach those around us who have not yet seen the beauty and the love of Jesus as their Savior. Friends, our greatest need as a Church and as followers of Jesus is to be separated unto the Holy Spirit. 
But what does that mean? Paul put it this way, "We have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit that is of God." I hope and pray that is our great desire! That the things of this world becomes less and less important and the Spirit of God coming in to take possession of our lives. For me it always comes back to Galatians 2:20 "I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live 
in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me." 
I'm sure that each of us are asking God for the Holy Spirit in our lives; to reach friends and family with Jesus. And often we see His power and receive great blessings, but God wants something more and higher. God wants us to seek for the Holy Spirit as we desire the air that we breath! Where the Holy Spirit is a power in our life to conquer self and cast out sin and fill us with Jesus! When we are separated unto the Holy Spirit our prayer will be, "Father, let the Holy Spirit have full dominion over me, in my home, in my temper, in every word of my tongue, in every thought of my heart, in every feeling toward my fellow men; let the Holy Spirit have entire possession." 
I hope that this is the desire of our hearts - to be men and women separated and given completely to the Holy Spirit to fill us with Jesus! 
I love you! 
Brad

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Fasting and Prayer

3/29/2020

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As we continue our study on surrender and especially focus on the Holy Spirit; let's remember that He is a gift from our Lord and Savior Jesus, so He can live in us as we walk this life. This week I want to look at what the disciples were doing when they received guidance to witness. 
"And when they fasted and prayed..." Acts13:2 
These followers of Jesus were fasting and praying and the Holy Spirit came and spoke to them. God had already extended His Church to Antioch and had given rich blessings to the Early Church. Now we find them serving Jesus with prayer and fasting. They are convicted that they can not do it on their own. That they must have the Holy Spirits leading every step of the way! Andrew Murray in his book Absolute Surrender puts it this way, 
"What a deep conviction they have - "It must all come direct from Heaven. We are in fellowship with the risen Lord; we must have a close union with Him, and somehow He will let us know what He wants." And they were, empty, ignorant, helpless, glad and joyful, but deeply humbled. "O Lord," they seem to say, "we are Thy servants, and in fasting and prayer we wait upon Thee. What is Thy will for us?" Absolute Surrender page 41 
We see the same reaction from Peter! He is on the housetop fasting and praying and God sent the vision to go to Caesarea. He didn't know what to do; he was just waiting to see what direction God was leading, but he was fasting and praying as he waited. 
You see friends, it is when our hearts are completely and entirely surrendered to Jesus; when we are separating ourselves from the the things of this world and in intense prayer seeking Jesus that God will reveal His will to us. 
It is when we are willing to go into our closets and shut out the business and televisions and technology, anything that can distract and get alone with God. These disciples in Acts went even deeper and shut themselves away from the material things like food and fasted! They wanted so bad to let go of anything that would distract them from intensely seeking their Lord; anything that would separate them from Jesus that they wouldn't even eat. That's how much they desired God's will through the Holy Spirit! 
I encourage you and me to truly seek the will of God in our lives and in our Church. To allow the Holy Spirit to fill us with Jesus and then send us out to reach a world that needs Jesus just as much as we do. 
Have a wonderful week and remember to pray with someone else in our Church for revival and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit! 

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    Pastor Brad

    Pastor Brad Traxler is the pastor of the Wrangell SDA Church. Brad Traxler is the husband of forty years to Cheryl, father to Kimberly and Ryan, and grandfather to Brad, Kevin, William, Eamon, Zairhen, Seraphina, and Zeelyah. He holds a BA in Theology and has been pastoring churches for twenty years. The greatest passion of His life has been to share Jesus. 

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