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Monday, April 8, 2024

Pearls

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Pearls


“Did you know….An oyster that has not been wounded in any way does not produce pearls? 
A pearl is a healed wound. Pearls are a product of pain, the result of a foreign or unwanted substance entering the oyster, such as a parasite or a grain of sand.  The inside of an oyster shell is a shiny substance called “nacre.”  When a grain of sand enters, the nacre cells go to work and cover the grain of sand with layers and more layers to protect the defenseless body from the oyster.  As a result, a beautiful pearl is formed!  The more pearls, the more valuable…

God never allows pain without a purpose.
What if your greatest ministry to others comes out of your greatest hurt or deepest wounds?
The hard things we may be going through now are really nothing in comparison to the glory that will be revealed in us later. (Romans 8:17-18)”

-author unknown


William James Roop


















Saturday, April 6, 2024

A Man Of Reckless Faith

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Here is an article by an unknown author about the evangelist Jack Coe.


"THE MAN OF RECKLESS FAITH”

I went before the judge and he asked me if I was guilty of disturbing the peace. I replied, "Whose peace?"

Well,' he replied, '..you folks clap your hands and shout, and other such things as that' 'Judge, is it not true that people at the ball game make a lot of noise, and do I not hear them yell, shout, and clap their hands also?'

"He answered, "Well, their hand clapping doesn't seem to
bother anyone, but when you folks do it, people just can't sleep.
"I asked, Judge, do you want to know what the difference is? He
answered, Yes, i'd like to know:

The difference is that the Holy Ghost
is in our shout, and it bothers the
neighbors, keeping them awake..and it
causes the beer joints to close their
doors."


Jack Coe was a large, domineering man with a tactless sense of humor in the healing tent. And he was a loving, compassionate father figure to the orphans in his children's home. As one of the main leaders in the Voice of Healing revival, Coe was either greatly loved, or greatly despised. He was raised without a father, so he learned as an adult to make God his Father. 

As a result, he had no problem putting men- no matter how high their denominational title-in their place, that is, if they tried to override the voice of God. The revivalists' dynamic personality left little room for a lukewarm response!

Coe was considered a radical evangelist because he, along with others, was doing much to combat racial prejudice in the Church.  At a time when society was calling for segregation, Coe strongly encouraged all races and cultures of the community to participate in his meetings.

 William James Roop











Monday, April 1, 2024

Cast your Nets

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Leadership lessons of Jesus.


The way Jesus said things without saying a word? He was of course without a peer and forever shall be. 

The disciples fished all night and were shut out. All fisherman know the feeling. (Maybe most) 

Jesus said, “Cast your net on the right side and ye shall find.” Indeed they did. The catch was so great they couldn’t pull it in.

Here comes one of the many lessons of this story: Newsflash pastors and preachers and soul winners, God doesn’t need you to catch the fish! When they got to shore, the meal was ready. The fish was already cooking. 


Three elements were there: 

1) The Fire - It’s His fire.
2) The Fish - God said, All souls are mine 
3) The Bread - He Is the Bread of Life. It’s His

Not only did Jesus tell them to cast the nets, He already had corn in the crib. The lesson couldn’t have been any stronger! You see this fish? I know what I’m doing. I don’t need any of you to catch fish. 

He doesn’t need us to fill the nets, He needs us to cast the nets!

William James Roop













Saturday, March 30, 2024

Learning to cast your care upon the Lord

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Learning to cast your care upon the Lord-- Kenneth E. Hagin.


I started out in the ministry as a young Southern Baptist boy preacher. I got the revelation of divine healing on the bed of sickness, and I was healed. In the early days of my ministry, I was pastor of a community church, a country church. Nearly everyone in the whole community came to church.

 In April 1937, I received the baptism of the Holy Ghost and spoke in other tongues.
In those days when a person received the baptism of the Holy Ghost and spoke in other tongues, he was ostracized by the denominational churches. On the other hand, I know many pastors who received the baptism of the Holy Ghost and still continued to pastor their churches. In fact, many of these pastors led their congregations into the baptism in the Holy Ghost. Most of the people in my church also received the baptism of the Holy Ghost.

Do you know what I found out when I began to fellowship with these Pentecostal people? I found out that they knew more about the Holy Ghost than I did, but that I knew more about faith than they did. We make a mistake when we think we can’t learn from others.


So I switched over and started pastoring a Pentecostal church. I didn’t know church problems existed until I got into a Full Gospel church! We didn’t have any problems at all in that denominational community church I had previously pastored. If a fellow was ever tempted to worry, I was tempted to worry about this Full Gospel church I was pastoring!

Here I was, just a twenty-one-year-old boy, and I was the pastor of a church that was twenty-three years old. There were people in that church who had had the baptism of the Holy Ghost and had been talking in tongues more years than I had been alive! You can understand that one as young as I was would feel a sense of inadequacy.

Also, there were problems in that church. I knew something should be said to the people, but I didn’t know what to say. I was afraid that if I said anything I would say the wrong thing. There were conditions that existed in that church that had existed for twenty-three years. I knew something ought to be done about the problems, but I didn’t know what to do. And if I did something, I was afraid I’d do the wrong thing.


I remember I had gotten up early one Sunday morning, and I became burdened about all the problems in the church. I suppose this was the only time in my life that I momentarily succumbed to a burden or care of this nature. I became so taken up with thinking about the problems in that church and wondering what to do, that when I came to myself, I was out walking in the yard (the parsonage was right next to the church). I don’t remember going out there. When I came to myself, I didn’t even know how I got out there.

Out there walking that yard, I realized what I was doing, and I asked myself, What am I doing out here?

Then I thought, Now, Lord, as the pastor, I have some responsibilities in this church. Something ought to be done, but I don’t know what to do. I feel my inadequacy.

Then I said, “Lord, You forgive me. I know better than this. I know better than to worry. I shouldn’t be overly concerned and full of anxiety about anything. I was tempted and momentarily I succumbed to anxiety, but I refuse to worry.”


I could sense the Spirit of God saying to my spirit, “Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you” (1 Peter 5:7).

I said, “Lord, I know that I have responsibilities as pastor, but I am going to turn all these church problems over to You. I’m not going to worry about them. I can’t fix them anyway.
“Lord, I’m going to preach the Word. I’m going to treat everyone right. I’m going to visit the sick, and I’m going to leave everything else to You. And I’m going to eat every meal and have a good night’s sleep every night because I’m not carrying these burdens — You are.”

 When I said that, it was just like something lifted from me. I went to church happy and singing, and the Spirit of God met us and we had a glorious service. Marvelous things happened in that service.

We would have a district fellowship meeting among pastors on the first Monday of each month. I’d go to these meetings, and the preachers would all be talking about their cares, their anxieties, their burdens, and their responsibilities.


These ministers would say to me, “How goes the battle?” They were all in a battle, but I didn’t have any battle. Praise God! I had the victory! Men in battle haven’t won the victory yet. The battle is the Lord’s, but the victory is ours. As I walked along carefree, here these ministers stood with long faces, talking about cares, burdens, and problems in their churches.

One of them said to me some time later, “I’ll tell you, I got mad about it because your faith really convicted us. You would just wave your hand and say, ‘Men, I don’t have a care! I couldn’t be better,’ and just go right on by.” He said those pastors would just stand there and blink their eyes and look at one another. Some of them would shake their heads and say, “The poor boy. He doesn’t have enough sense to worry.” No, I had too much sense to worry — too much Bible sense, that is.

I want to illustrate something to you. Can you see that if I had cast my cares about the church over on the Lord, I didn’t have those cares anymore? I didn’t have them; the Lord did. I didn’t say that no cares existed. I just said, “I don’t have a care,” because I didn’t; the Lord did. Praise God!


If I had three dollars in my billfold, and I gave them to you, I wouldn’t have them anymore. Then if someone came along and said, “Brother Hagin, I’m a little short on money. Could you loan me a dollar? I’ll pay you back tomorrow,” I would have to say to you, “My brother, I would gladly loan you a dollar, but I don’t have a dollar.” I’d be telling the truth, wouldn’t I? How could I loan that person a dollar if I didn’t have a dollar? Those three dollars I did have existed, all right, but I didn’t have them anymore. I had given them away.

In much the same way, if I cast my cares and anxieties on the Lord and someone says, “How goes the battle?” I’d have to say, “I don’t have a care.” Wouldn’t I be telling the truth? Of course I would!

Some of these preachers said later, “I know better. He is lying. I know he does have a care.” But I didn’t say cares didn’t exist; I just said I didn’t have them. If someone asked me for a dollar and I didn’t have any money with me, I wouldn’t tell them that a dollar doesn’t exist. I would only tell them that I don’t have one. Cares do exist, but I’ve given mine away. I don’t have them; the Lord has them!


One particular pastor, who was a neighboring pastor, would say, “He is lying. I know him better than any of the rest of you. And I know about all the problems in his church.” He’d mention about four or five of the problems he knew about, and they were even worse than anything he had in his church. But I’d still just breeze by and say, “Men, I don’t have a care.” Hallelujah! I didn’t.

 The Lord had all of my cares.

William James Roop















Thursday, March 28, 2024

Self-Help Christians?

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Here is some advice to lean on God for our strength and support.


"Self-help" is a threat to God's children. The temptation to fight our battles in our own strength and with our own supply line and not with the Holy Spirit dates back to Adam and Eve. The Apostle Paul chastised the Christians at Galatia for their self-help ways: "Are you foolish? Having begun by the Holy Spirit are you now being perfected by the flesh?"

 The word "flesh" represents all we can do apart from God's Holy Spirit and that will never work. Prevailing over the gates of hell and silencing the many voices of evil is totally in step with God's purpose for your life. You want it, but in your strength you simply can't get it. God is ready and willing and very eager to do with you what you can't do by yourself.

 Ask Him, then let Him.

William James Roop


















Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Giving Forgiveness

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Here is a story about giving forgiveness.

 A natural example of this point can be found by looking at the two seas in the Holy Land. The Sea of Galilee freely receives and gives out water. It has an abundance of life, nurturing many different kinds of fish and plant life. The water from the Sea of Galilee is carried by way of the Jordan river to the Dead Sea.

 But the Dead Sea only takes water in and does not give out. There is nothing living, no fish or plant life in the Dead Sea. The powerful life giving waters of the Sea of Galilee become dead when mixed with the hoarded waters of the Dead Sea. Life can not be sustained if held onto.

 –John Bevere, “The Bait Of Satan” Charisma House, 1997, page 12,13.


William J. Roop

Roop-Crappell Ministries

Hospice Care and Dying

The Trucking Tango

Brother Roop teaches the Bible











Monday, March 18, 2024

I Don't Remember

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord! 

Here is a story about forgiveness.

In “A Forgiving God in an Unforgiving World”, Ron Lee Davis

retells the true story of a priest in the Philippines, a

much-loved man of God who carried the burden of a secret

sin he had committed many years before. He had repented

but still had no peace, no sense of God’s forgiveness.

In his parish was a woman who deeply loved God and who

claimed to have visions in which she spoke with Christ and he

with her. The priest, however, was skeptical. To test her he

said, “The next time you speak with Christ, I want you to ask

him what sin your priest committed while he was in

seminary.” The woman agreed. A few days later the priest

asked, “Well, did Christ visit you in your dreams?”

“Yes, he did”. she replied

“And did you ask him what sin I committed in seminary?”

“Yes.”

“Well, what did he say?”

“He said, I don’t remember”


William J. Roop

Roop-Crappell Ministries

Hospice Care and Dying

The Trucking Tango

Brother Roop teaches the Bible