Awake,
O north wind, and come, O south! Blow upon my garden, that its spices
may flow out. Let my Beloved come to His garden, and eat its pleasant
fruits. Song of Solomon 4:16
With these words, the
Shulamite articulates the primary transition of her life. Her desire is
no longer that her comfort zone be maintained. Rather, her desire now
is that the King would receive maximum pleasure from the fragrance of
her life. The spices and fruits speak of the fragrant impact of her
life, and she recognizes that in order for that fragrance to be released
to the fullest degree, both the north and south winds are necessary.
The
north winds speak of times of adversity, and the south winds speak of
times of comfort and pleasure. There are some spices, some fragrances of
worship that can only be released in the pressures of difficulty and
trouble. When worship arises from a soul that is troubled, it is a
pleasing and fragrant aroma to God, and a sign of defeat for the enemy.
Without times of trouble, the fragrance of worship is not complete, nor
is the experience of intimacy made full. There is a communion of sorrows
that is uniquely precious, and only those who welcome the north winds
can know that communion.
By the same token, there are spices, or
fragrances of worship and love that can only be expressed as
thanksgiving for times of blessing. The point is that her desire is not
to be comfortable, but to give full expression of her love for the King,
that His pleasure might be full. She is living for Him now, and her
preparation for her place of intimate authority is nearly complete.
In
the past days of her life, the changing winds would have been a source
of anxiety and fear for the Shulamite. But now she sees that she can
command the winds to produce and release fervent love in her own heart.
So she prophesies to the winds, commanding them to do their work of
refining and releasing the pure fragrance of adoring worship that the
King desires. What a transition, and what a preparation for glory!
Gary Wiens
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Friday, March 7, 2014
What In The Heavens Are "Blood Moons"?
The sun shall be turned into darkness,
And the moon into blood,
Before the coming of the great and awesome day of the LORD.
- Joel 2:31, NKJV
A fascinating thing is occurring this year on April 15, which is the beginning of the Passover Feast in the Jewish calendar, and October 8, which is the beginning of Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles. The fascinating part is the occurrence of successive "Blood Moons," or total lunar eclipses.
As a matter of fact, there are four "Blood Moons" happening in 2014 and 2015, all on the Feast Days of Passover and Sukkot. These four total eclipses, called a "Tetrad," occur with some frequency, but only very rarely do they coincide with the Feast Days. The fascinating thing is that every time the Blood Moons coincide with the Feast Days, significant things happen regarding the State of Israel.
This coincidental event has only happened seven times since the resurrection of Jesus, and three times in the past 700 years. The most recent occurrences were in 1493-94, immediately following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. This event has increased interest in the plausible theory that Christopher Columbus had a Jewish ancestry (see the article in the Huffington Post by clicking here).
The next occurrence of the Tetrad on Feast Days was in 1949-50, following the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, and the most recent was in 1967-68, when the city of Jerusalem was restored to Israeli control.
So, we are poised to witness the eighth occurrence of Blood Moons happening on Feast Days since Jesus walked the earth. Prophetically, the number "eight" speaks of New Beginnings, and so we are encouraged to pay attention, to watch and pray, and seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit regarding the meaning of the events that will unfold surrounding this time in history.
Jesus commanded His followers to know the signs of the times. He gave the sun and the moon as lights and for "signs and seasons" (Genesis 1:14). We would be wise to watch, to pray, and to pay attention to what the Holy Spirit would say and do in these next weeks and months.
Blessings! Gary Wiens
And the moon into blood,
Before the coming of the great and awesome day of the LORD.
- Joel 2:31, NKJV
A fascinating thing is occurring this year on April 15, which is the beginning of the Passover Feast in the Jewish calendar, and October 8, which is the beginning of Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles. The fascinating part is the occurrence of successive "Blood Moons," or total lunar eclipses.
As a matter of fact, there are four "Blood Moons" happening in 2014 and 2015, all on the Feast Days of Passover and Sukkot. These four total eclipses, called a "Tetrad," occur with some frequency, but only very rarely do they coincide with the Feast Days. The fascinating thing is that every time the Blood Moons coincide with the Feast Days, significant things happen regarding the State of Israel.
This coincidental event has only happened seven times since the resurrection of Jesus, and three times in the past 700 years. The most recent occurrences were in 1493-94, immediately following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. This event has increased interest in the plausible theory that Christopher Columbus had a Jewish ancestry (see the article in the Huffington Post by clicking here).
The next occurrence of the Tetrad on Feast Days was in 1949-50, following the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, and the most recent was in 1967-68, when the city of Jerusalem was restored to Israeli control.
So, we are poised to witness the eighth occurrence of Blood Moons happening on Feast Days since Jesus walked the earth. Prophetically, the number "eight" speaks of New Beginnings, and so we are encouraged to pay attention, to watch and pray, and seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit regarding the meaning of the events that will unfold surrounding this time in history.
Jesus commanded His followers to know the signs of the times. He gave the sun and the moon as lights and for "signs and seasons" (Genesis 1:14). We would be wise to watch, to pray, and to pay attention to what the Holy Spirit would say and do in these next weeks and months.
Blessings! Gary Wiens
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Dark Nights and God's Ways
Dark Nights and God’s Ways
In the journey that God has each of us on – the journey
toward intimacy and authority as the Bride of Christ – it is essential to
understand the strategies of God, particularly during those seasons when His
presence seems hard to find.
The primary promise of God, spoken to the Shulamite in Song
of Solomon 2:4, is that His banner of love is over us for the entire journey.
In other words, everything He does and everything He permits is about loving
us, and drawing us further into His grace and power.
This truth seems the most difficult to grasp when His
immediate presence is withdrawn from us for a season, and we experience a “dark
night” of wondering, longing, and searching. These “nights” happen for several
reasons – the first being compromise in obedience. This is the one most easily
understood, but God does not withdraw because He is angry or rejecting us, but
rather to draw us back to Himself, to woo us further along the way into His
fullness and love.
The more difficult strategic withdrawal to understand is
when His presence is taken away, even though we are walking in obedience and
faithfulness. The purpose of this withdrawal is to present an opportunity for
more extravagant worship and faithfulness, costly adoration, the sacrifice of
praise. This costly, worshipful obedience is what Jesus presented to the Father
during His dark night of suffering, and because of this He was given the
highest place of authority and intimacy at the right hand of the Father. He was
proven worthy to have all authority because He was the Faithful Witness during
the greatest possible test.
Because God desires to present a worthy Bride to this worthy
Son, His strategy is to allow similar – though much less strenuous! – dark
nights for us, not because He is not caring or not paying attention, but
because He is inviting us to have the same mind as Jesus – loving the Father
extravagantly regardless of the season or circumstance.
The result of this kind of extravangant worship is a
greater, more powerful revelation of the beauty of Jesus, the magnificence of
the Father and of His plan for us. When Jesus suffered the tearing of His
flesh, which was the veil between us and the Father (Hebrews 10:20), the full
love and power of God was revealed to all who would receive Him. Similarly,
when we trust the Father in a dark night, He moves to reveal the beauty of
Jesus to us in greater measure, making our hearts lovesick instead of offended,
and causing all those around us to desire to know Him as well. The result?
Greater intimacy, and greater authority.
Such are the ways of God with His beloved Bride. For a full
treatment of this topic, access my teaching from Sunday, February 16 here: http://internationalhouseofprayernorthwest.org/category/listen-to-messages.
You can also order a full series on the Song of Solomon by
visiting the BHM store at http://www.burningheartministries.com/Shop.
Be blessed in the journey!
Gary Wiens
Saturday, October 27, 2012
The Glorious Bridegroom, Part 1
The Glorious Bridegroom Part 1
As we face our own fears, there is often a sense of unrest
rooted in the fear that God will measure us by our standards rather than by
His, and that we will be judged unworthy of His affections. While these
feelings may rightfully accompany true conviction and repentance, all too often
they are simply the recurrent accusations of the enemy and of our own minds,
passing judgment on ourselves based on the faulty assumption that God has done
so, too.
What is almost impossible for us to
understand (indeed, it requires the ministry of the Holy Spirit!) is that His
assessment is based on totally different information from what we see. He is
gazing upon a Bride who is fully formed, whose life is hidden in the life of
His Son at the Father’s right hand, and who therefore can embrace with total
confidence the character we already have been given. We, like any child growing
up into the identity made certain by his or her heritage, are becoming who we
are.
In the aftermath of the Shulamite’s
hesitancy to follow the king, she experiences this kind of restlessness, the
fear that she has lost the One her heart desires:
By night
on my bed I sought the one I love; I sought him, but I did not find him.
"I will rise now," I said, "And go about the city; in the streets and in the squares
I will
seek the one I love." I sought him, but I did not find him.
Song
3:1-2
When my own passion for intimacy with
Jesus was being birthed, there came such a crisis moment. My soul was awakening
to His wooing, and I had begun to ask the Holy Spirit to increase my sense of
longing for the presence of the Lord. I continued in this mode for some days,
until early one morning I had a profound and powerful encounter with the Spirit
of God. It was as though He decided, in a quite literal way, to take me up on
my request for a greater sense of longing.
In that hour-long confrontation (my wife
awoke to the sounds of my anguish and knew it was the Lord, but feared I was
having a heart attack!), I began to feel an overwhelming sense of desire, an
experience that was not wholly positive. I had been asking for a longing to
know the Lord, but wrapped in that awakening desire were the memories of all
the disappointments and anguish associated with unfulfilled dreams and deferred
hope. My heart was sick in a more desperate way than I had been able to
express, and in this moment the Spirit of God was inviting me to dance upon the
waves of those fears and disappointments. And I said “No.”
It was too frightening to go there. I couldn’t
bear the thought of facing all that “stuff,” so I did what the Shulamite did,
what Peter did. I looked at the mountains of difficulties instead of at the
strength of the King, and said, “You go ahead. I’ll be along some other
time.” In the days immediately following that decision, His presence
withdrew (or was it I who cowered away?), and I could not find that sweet voice
anywhere.
(to be continued in the next post)
Sunday, July 29, 2012
The Challenging Leader Part 2
In our previous post, the King has invited the Shulamite
to come out of her comfort zone and join Him in the adventure of maturity and
spiritual warfare. But she can’t do it. Her fears are too strong, and in the
first real crisis of the Song, the Shulamite declines his invitation:
Until the
day breaks and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved,
and be like a
gazelle or a young stag upon the mountains of Bether. Song 2:17
Turn,
my Beloved, and be like a gazelle or a young stag … . In
effect, the Shulamite is saying “Go, my Friend, and do what you do. I am unable
to come, but I will delight in your power and majesty.” This is the first
crisis of faith, and the first point at which the Shulamite must face her own
failure to experience the life she longs to live. Restoration will come later,
but for now she experiences a time of defeat.
I believe a powerful story in the Gospel of Matthew
corresponds directly to this prophetic scene. In chapter 14, the disciples are
trying to cross the Sea of Galilee in a raging storm in the middle of the
night. In a stunning fulfillment of the Song of Solomon allegory, Jesus, a real
flesh-and-blood Man, comes walking on top of the stormy seas. What’s more, He
invites Peter to come and join Him. I wish I could communicate the sense of
majesty I am feeling as I write this. We have read this story so often and
interpreted it (appropriately) in a spiritual sense, but it really happened!
Jesus was really out there, dancing on the waves. It was impossible, but it
happened! And then Peter really said, in time and space, during the fourth
watch of the night (between 3:00 and 6:00 a.m.), “Call me out there with You,
if it’s really You!”
Jesus loves Peter’s request, and answers him without
hesitation: Come! Imagine the scream in Peter’s heart. “OH NO! He’s
calling my bluff!” We can hardly imagine the moment. But he went for it. He
dared, if only for a moment, to dance upon his fears, and the Bridegroom’s
heart was thrilled. Even though Peter lost his focus, even though he began to
sink, the Lord was there, and that’s the whole point! When the King
invites us to come, we can presume upon His power to save. The subsequent
statement about “little faith” is not so much a rebuke as it is the
affectionate and playful response of a fatherly Bridegroom Whose heart is
absolutely exhilarated at the willingness of His child-friend to dare to trust
Him. Far from being critical of Peter, I believe Jesus is saying “O Peter!
If you only knew what is possible! Trust me, and I will take you through places
and events you never even dreamed of, for with me all things are possible!”
O,
Sovereign King! O, Majestic Lord of all things! I long to dare to run with You!
I long for the courage of the leap of faith, the joy of the victorious dance
upon the stormy waves, upon the mountains and hills of my fears. Call me again,
Lord! Don’t give up on me! Sooner or later, I will trust You.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Jesus: The Challenging Leader
In the life of every believer comes a time that is often
very disconcerting. It is the time when the Holy Spirit chooses to reveal to us
that the Lover of our souls and the King of the universe are one and the same
Person. We are gripped by a sense of awe and wonder that is pleasant and
exhilarating on one hand yet terrifying on the other, because we begin to see
the implications of intimacy with this Man, Christ Jesus. Our Beloved is tender
and gentle, but He is also the Challenging Leader, the Lord of Heaven and
Earth.
To the surprise of the Shulamite, her Beloved appears one
day in a thoroughly unexpected persona. She describes his coming in this way:
The voice
of my beloved!
Behold, he comes
leaping upon the mountains,
skipping upon the
hills.
Song 2:8
In these delightful phrases we are informed of the
sovereign power of the King over all the obstacles of life, the hills and
mountains that seem to us unconquerable hindrances to a life of faithful and
single-minded fervency for the Lord. Her response to the king’s activity is
filled with wonder and delight, and there is an initial sense of enjoyment at
what he is doing:
My
beloved is like a gazelle or a young stag. Behold, he stands behind our wall;
He is
looking through the windows, Gazing through the lattice.
Song 2:9
Suddenly, though, her mood changes, because as the king
draws near to the Shulamite in disclosing his sovereign authority over
difficult things, he invites her to join him in the exhilarating dance of
victory over the seemingly undefeatable realities of her life:
My
beloved spoke, and said to me: "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come
away.
For lo,
the winter is past, the rain is over and gone.
The flowers appear on the earth; the time of
singing has come,
and the
voice of the turtledove is heard in our land.
The fig
tree puts forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grapes give a
good smell.
Rise up,
my love, my fair one, and come away!
“O my
dove, in the clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the cliff, let me see
your face,
let me hear your
voice; for your voice is sweet, and your face is lovely.” Song 2:10-14
In our parallel relationship with Jesus, we must confront a crucial
question: Will He be allowed to draw us past the things that have regularly
defeated us in our attempts to be faithful in following Him? But the wondrous
emphasis here is clearly on the majesty of the king, his beauty and power, and
his ability to take the Shulamite with him as he leaps and dances over the
mountains of her life. He draws her after him, reminding her that she is hidden
in the cleft of the rock—a euphemism for the riven side of Christ on the cross.
It is in the context of his sacrifice and redeeming power that she is safe, and
his voice draws her to come and follow.
In our next article, we will see how the Shulamite responds to this
invitation from her Beloved.
Friday, June 15, 2012
Jesus, The Passionate Suitor Part 2
In our last
article we faced this powerful question: How can God call me beautiful at the
beginning of our relationship, before I become mature or do anything for Him?
Read on to discover the answer!
In his
wisdom and foresight, the king sees the Shulamite as she will be when his love
for her has completed its work, and he relates to her on that basis from the
beginning. He knows that the power of her true identity and the dynamic of his
love will transform her as certainly as the dawn comes in the morning. In the
place of intimate fellowship, he can speak these things in such a way that her
heart will hear them and believe. And so he invites her to the place of
nearness and intrigue, the banqueting house, and there sustains her with
expressions of his deepest love.
This
delightful and beautiful picture of the love language exchanged by these two is
given expression in the life of Jesus, this time recorded for us in the Gospel
of Matthew. But in the New Testament portrayal, the heart of Jesus is filled
with pathos and grief. Matthew 23:37-39 is the record of Jesus’
lamentation over Jerusalem because the city, as the representation of the Bride
of Christ, has refused His invitation to intimacy and instead has continued the
historic practice of killing those who come in His Name to draw her to His
side. The emotion of the heart of Jesus is palpable:
O
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are
sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen
gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!
Matthew 23:37
Jesus is
here giving testimony to the passion burning in the heart of God, the same
passion that caused Him to speak in such loving terms over the life of His dark
but lovely Bride in the Song. He longs to gather His people to the House of
Wine, to stir our emotions of being cherished and seen as fervent and
single-minded. He deeply desires to speak to our hearts of how He sees us, of the
delight that is within Him, of the confidence He has in the power of His love
to do the things He has promised.
Those
during the course of history who have experienced this “gathering,” this
stirring of the Lord’s intimate love, bear witness: Nothing else matters when
the touch of Christ’s love fills our hearts. This is why Paul the Apostle could
cheerfully consider every other important thing to be so much refuse compared
with the pleasure of knowing Jesus. It is why Stephen exulted as he stared
death in the face, for he saw the Lord’s glory in the face of his Bridegroom
standing at the right hand of the Father to welcome him into eternity. Because
of this reality the martyrs of history have gladly given their lives for the
sake of a better resurrection—one fully conformed to the life of the Beloved.
Jesus fulfills the promise, and He calls you and me to that place.
Jesus, I will receive Your invitation to the place of
intimacy in prayer. I long to hear Your voice telling me the truth of who I am,
and how You love me. I long to live out of the place of affirmation that comes
from Your heart, and that liberates me to love You in return and live in the
beauty of Your holiness. Draw me, Lord, and I will follow after You.
Gary Wiens
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