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Archive for Jennifer Kennedy Dean

May
18

If Prayer Works, Why Am I Hurting?

by newhope

by Jennifer Kennedy Dean

Many people feel that prayer had failed them when life brings disappointment and difficulty.

I have had this question addressed to me by believers time and time again, in one form or another: “If prayer really works, then why did this hard, disappointing experience happen to me?”

Let me remind you of the purpose of prayer: Prayer is the conduit through which the power and provision of God flow into the circumstances of earth. Prayer is not a mantra or a set of magic words that will transform all of life into a fairy tale that you author.

Prayer is bigger and better than that. Through prayer, God is working in your life to accomplish all of His purpose for you and for others in your life and for generations to follow. Some of that purpose is accomplished through difficulty. What you can be sure of is this: God will not allow any circumstance into your life that has purpose other than for your benefit. All of His plans for you are good, and all of His plans for you are designed to give you a future and a hope.

From Vessel to Vessel

Explore this thought with me as we look at a statement the Lord made about the country of Moab.

“Moab has been at ease since his youth;
He has also been undisturbed, like wine on its dregs,
And he has not been emptied from vessel to vessel,
Nor has he gone into exile.
Therefore he retains his flavor,
And his aroma has not changed.”
—Jeremiah 48:11 (NASB)

The Scripture is the living Word of God, so even those passages addressed to a particular audience in a specific time regarding a unique event have layers of meaning. Even those passages that are spoken within the context of time echo into eternity, speaking fresh truth to God’s people in any given moment.

This passage is describing the nation of Moab, regarding a situation that is framed in time. But it speaks to me through the present voice of the Living God.

God says that Moab has been left undisturbed. He is describing what a person is like who has never been challenged and forced to face disappointment or disruption of his life. He is like wine on its dregs. Wine left to sit on its dregs becomes bitter and harsh. It is unpalatable. It is useless.

The art of winemaking involves stages. A wine must be moved from vessel to vessel along the way. Each stage of wine making requires a vessel of different size, shape, and construction. Each stage accomplishes something different for the final product—the wine that is becoming. At each stage, the dregs have settled to the bottom and must be strained out to prevent the ruin of the wine. The stage at which a wine must be emptied from one vessel to another is not a static and predictable period. Only the winemaker can tell.

Let the Winemaker Work

God, the Great Winemaker, is fermenting a rich and perfect wine in you. Do you feel yourself being emptied from vessel to vessel? You get used to the shape and the feel of your life, and then find yourself being emptied out. During part of the process, you have been poured out, but not poured in yet. You know that your old vessel has been emptied out, but you do not feel yourself having arrived in a new vessel yet. There is a transition period, a pouring. It is disorienting and uncertain.

Then you find yourself poured into a life of a completely different shape and size and made up of new materials. It is new to you and it doesn’t feel like it fits.

Learn the ways of the Winemaker. Don’t be discouraged or frightened when the shape of your life and the construction of your days seem to be changing. God will not let you sit on your dregs. Unlike Moab, you will not stay in the same place. You will not be locked into your immaturity, retaining the same aroma as in your youth. He is ripening you, fermenting you, enriching you.

Rejoice! You are being emptied from vessel to vessel.


Adapted from Fueled by Faith.


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation. She is an internationally recognized teacher and author. Among her latest releases are The Power of Small, Life Unhindered!, and Altar’d.

Free mobile app at http://www.techrepublic.com/software/praying-life-live-10-mobile/2497525.

Scripture taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.

0 Categories : Articles, Columns, Jennifer Kennedy Dean
May
3

Prayer: God’s Heart Expressed Through Your Words

by newhope

by Jennifer Kennedy Dean 

True prayer is when God’s heart is expressed through your words. True prayer is when God’s words are in your mouth.

How do God’s words get in your mouth? First, God’s desires must be in your heart. “Out of the overflow of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34 NIV1984). “A wise man’s heart guides his mouth” (Proverbs 16:23 NIV1984).

Powerful praying is not a matter of knowing the right words to say, rather it is having a heart that is at God’s disposal—open to hear His every sigh and whisper and to echo it in prayer. As God molds your heart so that it matches His, your heart overflows in prayer. What God has spoken in your innermost being guides your lips in prayer.

He is your Prayer Teacher. He is transforming your life, shaping your heart. The end result of this intense training is what the Scripture calls “an instructed tongue.” “The Sovereign Lord has given me an instructed tongue” (Isaiah 50:4 NIV1984).

In Destined for the Throne, Paul Billheimer writes, “The content of all true prayer originates in the heart of God.” When we are truly praying, we are speaking out the heart of God. Prayer in its highest form occurs when the words I articulate, with my mouth or in mind, are merely the containers for God’s thoughts and desires. When, like Elijah, the word of the Lord from my mouth is truth, then I am truly praying.

In your praying experience, how much time have you devoted to making yourself open for God to express Himself to you? Are you willing to give as much passion to hearing God as you give to trying to win God over? Are you willing to let Him share your prayers?


This article is excerpted from Live a Praying Life! by Jennifer Kennedy Dean.

Today, May 3, 2012, is the National Day of Prayer. NewHopeDigital.com encourages our audience to take time to pray for the US, its leaders, and its people.


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation. Her book, Heart’s Cry: Principles of Prayer, is a National Day of Prayer selection.

Among her latest releases are Life Unhindered!, Altar’d, and The Power of Small.

Free mobile app at http://www.techrepublic.com/software/praying-life-live-10-mobile/2497525.

Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 Biblica. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.

 

0 Categories : Articles
Apr
18

Prayer Convinces God to Bless Us (Misconception #4)

by newhope

by Jennifer Kennedy Dean

Misconception #4: Prayer is the means of cajoling God into releasing His carefully hoarded riches.

What makes prayer work the way God says it will work? How can we experience the power in prayer that Scripture promises? 

In this series, we have been exploring the myths that have crept into our prayer theology, robbing prayer of its full potential to release the power and provision of God in our lives. We have looked at 3 myths: (1) Some pray as if prayer is the way to get “things” from God; (2) Some pray as if prayer will give God new information or inspire in Him new ideas; and (3) Some pray as if God sometimes forgets or tries to renege on His promises and is depending on pray-ers to remind Him of them. Today we add a fourth. Some pray as if prayer is the means of cajoling God into releasing His carefully hoarded riches.

“Prayer is not overcoming God’s reluctance, but laying hold of God’s willingness” (Martin Luther). God offers us His resources. He invites us to take His gifts. He does not have to be convinced to let go of His blessings. His Word says that He lavishes on us the riches of His grace (Ephesians 1:8) and that He lavishes His love on us (1 John 3:1). He is extravagant in His gifts. He pours them out. He showers us with them. He doesn’t trickle them out or sprinkle them on us. Scripture never uses language that would portray God as stingy or hesitant to give. Instead we read that He “richly blesses all who call on him” (Romans 10:12 NIV1984)*.

When we pray as if we are trying to wrestle goodness from God’s grasp, we expend spiritual energy needlessly trying to convince God of something of which He is already convinced. Giving you every good thing gives Him joy; it delights Him. Jesus assures us with these words: “‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom’” (Luke 12:32; author’s emphasis). He has set His heart on you.

In prayer we are cooperating with God. We are not working to try to persuade Him. God does not need to be cajoled into wanting the best for you and for the ones you love. Rather, we are yielding to Him, letting our hearts be pliable and moldable so that He can recreate His own desires in us.

“Delight yourself in the LORD and he will give you the desires of your heart” (Psalm 37:4). The word translated “delight” in this statement is a Hebrew word that means soft or pliable. To delight in the Lord means to be molded by Him. To be compliant to His desires. To be open and available to His transforming presence. When He has access to your malleable heart, He can shape it to match His. He can imprint His desires on your yielded heart. When you pray the desires of your heart, your prayer is the expression of His desires.

“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.  And if we know that he hears us—whatever we ask—we know that we have what we asked of him” (1 John 5:14–15).

The primary focus of prayer is God’s heart. His heart’s desires are all for your benefit and for your good. He does not need to be convinced to love you and will the best for you.

So, turn your attention from trying to persuade Him and, instead, allow yourself to be persuaded by Him. Move from working to get Him to yield to your requests and, instead, yield your heart to Him. Allow Him to make your heart the repository of His desires.


This is the fourth in an occasional series on misconceptions about prayer. Adapted from Live a Praying Life by Jennifer Kennedy Dean. A Live a Praying Life journal and trade book are also available, as well as a leader’s kit (DVD).


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation. Among her latest releases are Altar’d and The Power of Small.

Free mobile app at http://www.techrepublic.com/software/praying-life-live-10-mobile/2497525.

*All Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 Biblica. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.

0 Categories : Articles, Columns, Jennifer Kennedy Dean
Feb
22

Jennifer Kennedy Dean: 40 Days of Transformation (Using “Altar’d” for Lent)

by newhope

Listen as Jennifer Kennedy Dean discusses why she chose to make Altar’d a 40-day journey. She also shares some suggestions for making the book a shared, or group, experience. Click here to access a small group leader’s guide for Altar’d, available free from New Hope Digital.

As today, February 22, 2012, is the first day of Lent, she also discusses why Altar’d would make a great individual, small group, or church study for this season of the year.

Book summary: Through careful exposition and biblical teaching, celebrated author and prayer expert Jennifer Kennedy Dean guides readers on a 40-day exploration of the Scriptures to discover what it means to truly live a life dead to flesh and alive to the Spirit.


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation and a respected author and speaker. She has spoken in such venues as the Billy Graham Training Center at the Cove and Focus on the Family. Best known for the Live a Praying Life Bible study and related products, some of her other recent books include The Power of Small and Life Unhindered! She makes her home in Marion, Kentucky.

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

0 Categories : Podcast
Feb
21

Small Group Leader’s Guide for “Altar’d”

by newhope

by Rachel Freeny

Editor’s note: Jennifer Kennedy Dean’s Altar’d can be used in a variety ways. Certainly individuals can benefit greatly from the book. There is, however, something to be said for processing material together as partners or in a group. When brothers and sisters meet together to pray, read the Word, and discuss a book like Altar’d, new insights and perspectives can be discovered, thereby encouraging everyone involved. New Hope Digital offers this guide as a suggested means to that end.

Introductory Meeting

Plan an introductory gathering to discuss plans for structuring this 6-week study together. Consider offering light refreshments, such as cookies and beverages.

Begin by choosing a weekly meeting time (Sunday school, small group, book club, etc.) that works best for the group. About an hour should be sufficient to work through the suggested questions and pray. Organize weekly child care, if necessary.

Depending on how well your group knows each other, spend some time getting to know everyone. Introduce yourself to the group and tell them a little about yourself. If your group is small, go around the room and have everyone introduce themselves and offer an interesting fact about themselves. If your group is large, do this in groups of 2 or 4.

After introductions are made, take a few minutes to present the theme of the book: a 40-day exploration of the Scriptures uncovering what it means to truly live a life dead to the flesh and alive to the Spirit.

Suggest that everyone find a partner or assign everyone a partner in the group (same gender). Partners will walk through the book together during the week and should be encouraged to talk and pray regularly via phone, email, texts, and/or face-to-face meetings. Each day in the Altar’d devotional contains at least 1 reflection question to spur discussion.

On group meeting days, partners will join with 2 or 3 other sets of partners to form groups of 6 or 8. People who do not feel comfortable sharing in a large group will have a chance to open up and discuss questions in these smaller groups.

This group study can be as formal or casual as you want it to be. Be a guide through the material, but allow the focus to be on the group discussion.

General Format for Weekly Meetings

The daily devotionals in Altar’d are quite in depth, so when you meet each week as a group, the best use of your time will be to discuss major points of the study instead of spending a lot of time on each day.

As a leader, begin each meeting by quickly bringing up a few points that stood out to you. Then ask a couple volunteers to briefly share some points that stood out to them from the previous week. (10–15 minutes)

The rest of the time should be focused on small group discussion (3–4 partners) using the suggested sample questions for each week below. (Or feel free to develop your own questions.) (30–40 minutes)

These groups of 6–8 should close the time together in specific prayer for one another. (10–15 minutes)

Week 1 (Days 1–7)

  •  What do you think it means to be “of the flesh?”
  •  What do you think it means to be “of the Spirit?”
  •  What is one lie your flesh tells you? How can you keep from listening to that lie?

Week 2 (Days 8–14)

  • What does it mean to be a “new creation?”
  • Dean makes the point that surrendering to Christ enhances, not hinders, our personalities (p.54). How have you seen this statement proven true in your own life or the life of someone you know?
  • How is obedience a part of the process of being made new? Why is obedience difficult?

Week 3 (Days 15–21)

  • How does our insecurity and self-focus hinder us from fully living out our salvation?
  • What happens to us when we let Christ’s life flow through us?
  • Why can we trust Christ to help us overcome even our biggest temptations and sins?
  • Does knowing Christ dwells in you change how you live? Why or why not?

Week 4 (Days 22–28)

  • Why was Jesus able to resist temptation? What does that mean for us?
  • How does temptation benefit us?
  • How can we recognize when our “flesh” is acting? How should we respond?
  •  How do we develop a “steadfast heart?” (p.141)

Week 5 (Days 29–35)

  • How can our words be dangerous? How can Jesus transform our words?
  • What is holding you back from fully surrendering your heart and life to Christ?
  • What do you think the author means when she writes, “Sometimes worshipping is an act of your will, not your emotions”? (p.167)

Week 6 (Days 36–40)

After you discuss the last week’s readings, spend some time reflecting on what the Lord has done in group members’ lives through this study. Give them the opportunity to share something they’ve learned about altar’d living over the past 6 weeks. Consider closing out the study with a special prayer time thanking the Lord for what He has done and what He will continue to do in each of your lives.

  • What is the difference between happiness and joy?
  • How does the author define Sabbath? What are the benefits of Sabbath?
  • In what ways does God use our weakness for His glory?
  • What happens in our lives when we “cut off” our “flesh?”

An intern with the WMU® Product Development Center, Rachel Freeny is a junior majoring in journalism/mass communication at Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama.

1 Categories : Articles, downloads
Feb
16

Jennifer Kennedy Dean: Learning to Recognize the Flesh

by newhope

Listen as Jennifer Kennedy Dean talks about the concept of flesh. What is it? How do we recognize it? How do we deal with it? Are we living by flesh or by the Spirit?

Altar’d: Experience the Power of Resurrection is all about living free in Christ.

Join Jennifer on a 40-day journey of transformation. This is a great book for Lent (preparing for Easter) or any time of the year. Altar’d is available as a paperback ($14.99)  and an ebook ($9.99; Nook).


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation and a respected author and speaker. She is best known for her Live a Praying Life Bible study and related products.

Widowed in 2005 after 26 years of marriage to Wayne Dean, they have 3 grown sons. She recently celebrated the birth of her first grandson, Campbell. She lives in Marion, Kentucky.

For more podcasts with Jennifer, go  to our podcast page.

 

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

0 Categories : Podcast
Feb
15

February 2012: Rhythms of Crucifixion and Resurrection

by newhope

by Randy Bishop

I grew up in Maryland, went to college there (go Terps!), and then moved to Illinois for several years. I’m used to snow. I like my winters cold.

A little more than 4 years ago, I moved way south to Birmingham, Alabama. The winters are not that cold here, and we might get an inch of snow in a good year. (Locals may dispute the term good.)

This season has been especially disappointing for me. While I’m asking for a bleak midwinter, we’ve gotten temperatures in the 70s. I’m fairly certain some spring flowers were in full bloom here in late January. Indecent, I say.

Now I’m not going to talk global warming one way or the other. And since I know God controls the weather, I don’t want to sin by complaining against His good and sovereign purposes. (Retract indecent, please.)

I will say this, though, those northern winters I fondly remember clearly served to mirror and illustrate the important spiritual truth that life follows death. Right now the flowers in Baltimore and in Chicago definitely appear dead. You can’t miss it! But they will be blooming soon enough.

In her new book, Altar’d: Experience the Power of Resurrection, author Jennifer Kennedy Dean deals with crucifixion and resurrection in our own lives. As we approach Lent (starts February 22) and Easter (April 8), there are no better themes to meditate upon.

She writes: “God designed the eternal cadence and it is built into creation at its crux. Life emerges out of death. The seed that falls into the ground to die to produce a harvest. The branch that is pruned so that it can bear more fruit. The beautiful colors of fall, ushering in the very death that will culminate in the springtime resurrection.”

Spiritually, we can embrace death in order to grasp life. We can trust the One who’s been there and done that, the One who is still in the business of radical transformation. The process starts with our salvation through the finished work of Christ and continues with His ongoing work deep inside us, our sanctification. As we let Him put to death sin in our lives, we can experience life more abundant and free.

“Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life” (John 12:24–25 ESV).

Jesus calls us to die to those things that profit nothing but seem like everything, to release them from our desperate grasp, and lay them on the altar (sometimes over and over). Let’s open ourselves to God’s altaring work so that we will bear much fruit to His glory!

February on New Hope Digital:

  • Our theme is Altar’d: Dead to Sin, Alive to God.
  • Enjoy podcasts and articles from Jennifer Kennedy Dean.
  • Suggestions for how to make Altar’d a shared experience will be available later this month.
  • Special Delivery, the second book in the “Freedom” series of novels on human trafficking from Kathi Macias, is now available as an ebook in advance of the print release.
  • Welcome Janet Thompson as our guest columnist.

All Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

0 Categories : Articles, Columns, Randy Bishop
Feb
13

Jennifer Kennedy Dean: What It Means to Be Altar’d

by newhope

Listen as Jennifer Kennedy Dean explains the title to her latest book, Altar’d: Experience the Power of Resurrection. Learn what’s at stake in understanding the difference between life in the flesh and life in the Spirit. And discover why dying to the flesh yields a life of spiritual freedom. 

Join Jennifer on a 40-day journey of transformation. This is a great book for Lent (preparing for Easter) or any time of the year. Altar’d is available as a paperback ($14.99)  and an ebook ($9.99; Nook).


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation and a respected author and speaker. She is best known for her Live a Praying Life Bible study and related products.

Widowed in 2005 after 26 years of marriage to Wayne Dean, they have 3 grown sons. She recently celebrated the birth of her first grandson, Campbell. She lives in Marion, Kentucky.

For more podcasts with Jennifer, go  to our podcast page.

 

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

0 Categories : Podcast
Feb
6

Surrender to the Cross

by newhope

by Jennifer Kennedy Dean 

The Cross of Christ stands as the point of separation between the old person powered by death-driven corrupted flesh, and the new creation, powered by the very Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead.

At the moment you embrace the Cross, you receive its power into your life—a power that is eternally and continually working. Paul says that “death is at work in us” (2 Corinthians 4:12 NIV1984). At work in us now. Doing ongoing work. Doing present work.

A.B. Simpsons says, “We may not preach a crucified Saviour without being also crucified men and women. It is not enough to wear an ornamental cross as a pretty decoration. The cross that Paul speaks about was burned into his very flesh, was branded into his being, and only the Holy Spirit can burn the true cross into our innermost life.”

The death that Jesus died on the Cross cannot be—and need not be—repeated. Only He is able to die for our sins, having no sins of His own to die for. The priests of the Old Testament, which were foreshadows of our Great High Priest, had to offer sacrifices first for their own sins, then for the sins of the people.

But Jesus had no sins to be atoned for, and He alone is able to bear our sins on our behalf. The writer of Hebrews explained it: “Unlike the other high priests, he does not need to offer sacrifices day after day, first for his own sins, and then for the sins of the people. He sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself” (Hebrews 7:27 NIV1984).

Dying to Be Freed

As we surrender our corrupted flesh to His crucifixion, and as His death works in us, we are not repeating the atoning work of the Cross. That is done, completed, finished. Instead, we are letting the power of the Cross work out the crucifixion of our flesh.

It is not a cross of punishment that works in us. The Cross did its work of punishment on the body of Jesus. The Cross frees us from the confines, distortions, and limitations of our sinful nature. It is the only hope of being all that we were created to be.

God designed an eternal cadence, and it is built into creation at its crux. Life emerges out of death. The seed that falls into the ground to die to produce a harvest. The branch that is pruned so that it can bear more fruit. The beautiful colors of fall, ushering in the very death that will culminate in the springtime resurrection.

Living altar’d means surrendering to the death from which life comes. The Cross is the only place where flesh can go to die.


Editor’s note: This article was adapted from Day 7 of Altar’d.


Author and speaker Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation.  Her two most recent releases are Altar’d and The Power of Small. She is in demand as a speaker and has spoken in such venues as the Billy Graham Training Center at the Cove and Focus on the Family.

Links to columns on prayer and all 4 of her grandmother columns are available on her Voices page.

Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 Biblica. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.

1 Categories : Articles, Columns, Jennifer Kennedy Dean
Feb
1

Download the First Chapter of Altar’d, Jennifer Kennedy Dean’s Latest Book

by newhope

Download the first chapter of Altar’d: Experience the Power of Resurrection and begin a 40-day journey of transformation. Explore the Scriptures as an individual, small group, class, or church.

Ideal for reading during the 40 days of Lent (February 22, 2012, to April 7, 2012; not counting Sundays) in preparation for Easter, this study also can be used any time of the year.

Book description

We are created to live in an altar’d state—surrendered, yielded, free.

The noun altar is usually understood to be a place of worshipful offering. Something of value is offered up and released on the altar. When we turn the noun altar into a verb—altar our fear, our failure, our possessiveness, our need to control—all those things that hold us captive and keep us from running the race at full throttle are released.

Through careful exposition and biblical teaching, celebrated author and prayer expert Jennifer Kennedy Dean guides readers on a 40-day exploration of the Scriptures and what it means to truly live a life dead to flesh and alive to the Spirit.

Download the introduction and first chapter (day 1) of this book now.


Jennifer Kennedy Dean is executive director of the Praying Life Foundation and a respected author and speaker. She is in demand as a speaker and has addressed audiences at the Billy Graham Training Center at the Cove and Focus on the Family. Her recent books include The Power of Small and Life Unhindered! She is best known for her Live a Praying Life Bible study and related products.

She recently became a grandmother to Campbell Wayne Dean. Read more about that here.

 

0 Categories : downloads
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