Union with אלוהים
Love is as strong as death;
its jealousy unyielding as the grave.
Love’s flames are vehement flames of fire,
the very flame of Yah.
Many waters cannot quench love;
rivers cannot sweep it away.
Intimacy with a Holy God
One woman’s journey of walking with a kind God Who burns with ardent flames of love.
My Revelation on the Island of Patmos: Part 3a of 5
Escaping to the Island of Patmos in 2012, I was desperate to find rest and healing from intensifying trigeminal nerve pains.
The Shulamite’s Song in the Night
When bouts of pain have come, besides Yeshua’s story, the inspirational story of the Shulamite in Song of Songs 5 has comforted me. She too was vexed with an aggregate of afflictions.
The Shulamite, representing the Bride of Messiah (Ephesians 5:22-32), was beckoned into the veil of night by the Lover of her soul.
She arose to be with her Beloved God, and in an unexpected abruptness His presence was gone. She searched diligently and repeatedly cried out His name but to no avail.
Escaping to the Island of Patmos in 2012, I was desperate to find rest and healing from intensifying trigeminal nerve pains.
The Shulamite’s Song in the Night
When bouts of pain have come, besides Yeshua’s story, the inspirational story that has upheld me is that of the Shulamite in Song of Songs 5.
She too was vexed with an aggregate of afflictions.
The Shulamite, representing the Bride of Messiah (Ephesians 5:22-32), was beckoned into the veil of night by the Lover of her soul.
She arose to be with her Beloved God, and in an unexpected abruptness His presence was gone. She searched diligently and repeatedly cried out His name but to no avail.
The Night Watchmen
“It’s in the middle of the night!” Unempathetic to the Bride’s plight, the guards of the city incessantly demanded, “Shut up! Stop this foolish desperation!”
Infuriated that the Shulamite would not concede, with dark cruelty they attempted to beat her into submission.
Instead of breaking her will, their torment only enhanced the Shulamite’s longing for her Beloved God.
Daughters of Jerusalem
The Shulamite cried to the daughters of Jerusalem, “If you find my Beloved, tell Him that I am lovesick.”
The daughters of Jerusalem had vowed to remember God’s love, but their hearts were growing cold in the face of tribulations.
They questioned the Shulamite, “What is your Beloved anyway?”
The Shulamite was physically and emotionally distressed. However, her intimate knowledge of her Beloved and her obedience to Him had solidified within her a knowledge of Him.
She had no accusation against Him, only desire for Him.
Beauties of the Beloved
With tears and a light in her eyes, the Shulamite recounts the rare beauties of her Beloved’s image that stole her heart.
She sings, “My Beloved is white,” meaning, “My Beloved is holy.”
The Shulamite emulates Yeshua in recounting Yehovah’s holiness.
In Psalm 22, hanging on the cross Yeshua vehemently cries, “My God, My God why have You forsaken Me… yet You are still holy!”
She continued to paint a picture of her Beloved by describing 16 attributes of God that sustained her heart during pain.
To be Continued…
Finding My First Love
Zealous For Yeshua
When I first came to faith I was 9 years old. Natalie shared about Yeshua with my sister Teri, and as a nosey little sister I was all ears.
She described God’s holiness and that our sin separates us from God. She said the punishment of our sin is death and that Yeshua took the punishment for us.
My unembellished response was, “I believe that.” It seemed logical enough.
She told Teri that in order to be saved from the punishment she needed to believe with her heart and confess with her mouth that Yeshua is Lord, stop sinning and be baptised.
God will then give you mercy to live with Him. I thought, “Ok.”
It seemed like an easy enough way to get out of the punishment. And I liked what I was hearing about God and wanted to be closer to Him.
Zealous For Yeshua
When I first came to faith I was 9 years old. Natalie, a childhood friend, shared about Yeshua with my sister Teri, and as a nosey little sister I was all ears.
She described God’s holiness and that our sin separates us from God. She said the punishment of our sin is death and that Yeshua took the punishment for us.
My unembellished response was, “I believe that.” It seemed logical enough.
Natalie told Teri that in order to be saved from the punishment she needed to believe with her heart and confess with her mouth that Yeshua is Lord, stop sinning and be baptised.
“God will then give you mercy to live with Him,” she said.
I thought in my heart, “Ok.” It seemed like an easy enough way to get out of the punishment.
And I liked what I was hearing about God and wanted to be closer to Him.
Moma and Daddy felt the weightiness of such a decision and wanted me to wait until I was older to decide.
The Lord used my strong-willed nature and made my little heart zealous to accept and follow this One Who took my punishment.
A childlike faith erupted in me that made me hang on to what even I as a child knew to be true.
My parents’ decision for me to wait only solidified my beliefs and increased my desire to follow Yeshua.
For a year I stubbornly continued to tell my parents that I want to give my life to God and follow Yeshua. A year of pleading was evidence to them that I was serious and not going to let this go.
April 1, 1984, nine days before my 10th birthday, I was allowed to give my life to Yeshua.
My Heavenly Abba
A month later in May, Moma and Daddy called Teri and me to the kitchen in our country home. They told us that Daddy was moving out and that soon they would be divorcing.
It is impossible to express with the written word the love and emotional bond that Daddy and I have. My little heart was shattered that he would no longer be at home.
I remember sitting on my bed and understanding that God had foresight that Daddy’s move and the divorce were coming.
It was God Who had been pursuing me because He knew my world was about to change. For a year He intentionally set His heart on making me His.
With compassion and tears He drew near to me as a 10 year old little girl who felt a deep sense of loss in her life. That night on my bed God became my heavenly Abba.
Healer of My Broken Heart
After several heartbreaks, broken promises and tragedies, at 21 years old I found myself in a hidden depression.
If you were to ask others from that time in my life, they most likely would not have known. I was succeeding in nursing school, and as a dancer I had been trained to perform.
The show must go on.
As a bulimic youth and college minister, I taught about following God while a war raged on inside of me that I was failing to conquer.
When the doors to my room were closed, tears would automatically begin.
After opening up to Linda, my friend’s mother, she asked me to go with her to a conference.
Sitting in the car in the conference parking lot with my friend Missy I confided in her, “I feel like God is mad at me all the time. I know that bulimia is wrong, but I can’t seem to stop.”
Missy was aware of the tragedies, broken promises and ultimately my broken heart.
She responded with wise words that I yearned to hear and, yet, wrestled to believe, “God is not mad at you. He loves you, and He is going to heal your heart.”
Holy Spirit
The woman leading us in worship appeared as if Yeshua were standing right in front of her. I told Linda, “If I could have that with the Lord, then I know I could live.”
She responded, “‘That’ comes with the baptism of the Spirit.”
To be completely honest, I rolled my eyes inside. The “baptism of the Spirit” was not what I was looking for.
The people who proclaimed they had been “baptised by the Spirit” appeared unquestionably bizarre to me.
I merely wanted the intimacy with Yeshua that I perceived the worship leader was experiencing.
As I walked down the aisle with trepidation, I prayed, “God, protect me from the demons in here. Protect me God. Protect me God.”
People were being prayed for, and they would fall over. It really freaked me out.
Nevertheless, as I gazed upon the worship leader interacting with God, I longed for the discernable intimacy she had with the Lord.
Keeping my head down, I petitioned for God’s mercy as I walked into the space near the stage.
A God in Love
In all the worship services I have ever attended, something out of character and amazing happened.
The worship leader set down her microphone, came off the stage and made a straight line toward me. She introduced herself as Lily, and asked me what I wanted prayer for.
I told her that I wanted the baptism of the Spirit.
As she began to pray, I sensed the same presence of God that I usually felt in worship but only stronger.
The magnitude of God’s Presence literally brought me to my knees and then I was lying on the floor.
I began to weep deeply and bitterly in public nonetheless. At the time I honestly did not care that this side of me that I had kept in the dark was now being observed by others.
The cry was a groan deeper than I had experienced in my room.
I told Lily, “I don’t know why I’m crying.” She reassured me and said that it is the Holy Spirit going deep and that He wanted to heal me.
Someone lifted my hair off of my ear and whispered, “The Lord says that you are the Rose of Sharon and that He wants you to read the Song of Solomon.”
That night on my bed I read the Song of Songs and was in awe. My head swirled and then clarity came.
“So, You are not a God Who just wants me to be good all the time but You are actually a God in love.”
Turning Away and Turning To
40 Days of Repentance
At sundown August 20th as the Hebrew month of Elul began we celebrated the New Moon with feasting and by invoking a heavenly Presence as we sang songs about God's holiness.
The atmosphere was rich with the Spirit brooding over us as we worshipped Him.
The New Moon Elul marks the beginning of 40 days of repentance for Jews worldwide which leads up to the climax of Yom Kippur, the most revered day in Judaism.
In our community we not only take the 40 days to turn “away” but we also turn “to.” We turn away from sin and we return to our first love, Yeshua.
Prayer
Abba, along with Jews around the world, during this Hebrew month of Elul we humble ourselves, turn from sin and ask for new hearts of fiery devotion to You.
We cry out for a revival of loving God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength and of loving our neighbor as ourselves.
40 Days of Repentance
At sundown August 20th as the Hebrew month of Elul began we celebrated the New Moon with feasting and by invoking a heavenly Presence as we sang songs about God's holiness.
The atmosphere was rich with the Spirit brooding over us as we worshipped Him.
The New Moon Elul marks the beginning of 40 days of repentance for Jews worldwide. These hallowed 40 days ultimately leads to the climax of Yom Kippur, the most revered day in Judaism.
In our community we not only take the 40 days to turn “away” but we also turn “to.” We turn away from sin and we return to our first love, Yeshua.
As a dancer I learned quickly that the way to prevent dizziness and falling is to keep a steady focus on what I was turning to and not what I was turning from.
It does not work to simply turn away from sin without a focus on where, or rather, on Whom you are turning toward.
Spiritually, we spend this month doing both. Turning away from all that hinders love and returning to the One Who is Love.
40 Day First Love Fast
We are currently on the 40 Day First Love Fast. We began sundown Elul 1, August 20th until sundown Yom Kippur September 28th.
We are focusing on 2 prayer points: 1) believers will return to their first Love Yeshua; 2) Israel will turn to Yeshua, the Lover of their souls.
Below are 3 of the Scriptures we are highlighting:
REVELATION 2:2-5, “I know your works, your labor, your patience, and that you cannot bear those who are evil.
…you have persevered and have patience, and have labored for My name’s sake and have not become weary.
Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love. Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent and do the first works…
To him who overcomes I will give to eat from the tree of life, which is in the midst of the Paradise of God.”
SONG OF SONGS 3:1-4, "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 will seek the One I love. I sought Him, but I did not find Him….
’Have you seen the One I love?’ Scarcely had I passed by them, when I found the One I love. I held Him and would not let Him go.”
EZEKIEL 36:24-29, “For I will take you from among the nations…and bring you into your own land. Then I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean…
I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh.
I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes… you shall be My people, and I will be your God. I will deliver you from all your uncleannesses.”