Wed. Jan 1st, 2025
Fire in My Bones

With journalistic and Holy Spirit-filled commentary, J. Lee Grady is providing readers with hope and wisdom on what is happening in our culture today.

The Power of Relational Discipleship

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Last week 91 guys gathered for a three-day retreat.
It reminded me that real Christianity has nothing to do with superficial
religion.

For
at least three years I’ve wanted to gather a group of friends for a time of
encouragement and personal ministry. I couldn’t afford to host a fancy event,
and I didn’t think these guys wanted a big hoopla with expensive hotels and
high-priced speakers.

So
we went with a simple format that involved a donated church facility (thank
you, Pastor Donna), a totally informal dress code (jeans and T-shirts),
home-cooked meals (we met in North Carolina, the barbeque capital of the South)
and cheap rooms, courtesy of the local Hampton Inn. What surprised me was that
91 guys from 20 states and four foreign countries showed up for three days of
worship, small group interaction and inspiring messages from 32 of the guys
(everyone kept their comments brief to allow time for fellowship).

Continue Reading… The Power of Relational Discipleship

How the Resurrection Broke Eden’s Curse

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Sin began in a garden. Thousands of years later, Jesus Christ stood in another garden and announced His ultimate victory.

The Easter story has many amazing scenes: Jesus’ last Passover meal with His disciples, His arrest and brutal scourging, His crucifixion between two criminals, and the dramatic darkness that fell on Jerusalem at the moment of His death. But my favorite part of the story is when Mary Magdalene peered inside Jesus’ tomb on that resurrection morning. John 20:11-12 describes it this way:

“But Mary was standing outside the tomb weeping; and so, as she wept, she stooped and looked into the tomb; and she saw two angels in white sitting, one at the head and one at the feet, where the body of Jesus had been lying” (NASB).

Continue Reading… How the Resurrection Broke Eden’s Curse

Signs of a Fresh Outpouring of the Holy Spirit

We are about to experience a new move of His Spirit. As we welcome it, let’s protect the church from abuse and misuse of His gifts.

During the past few months I have prayed for many people to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit. It has reminded me of the mid-1970s, when Baptists, Episcopalians, Catholics, Lutherans and Methodists were discovering the power of the Spirit in small prayer groups, renegade Bible studies and gatherings in hotel ballrooms.

Back then people seemed especially hungry for a deeper experience with God. Hollywood actor Pat Boone wrote a book called A New Song to testify how he was filled with the Holy Spirit. Episcopal priest Dennis Bennett led thousands into the experience after he was dismissed from his staid, traditional church in California because he admitted speaking in tongues. And Presbyterian novelist Catherine Marshall wrote Something More to describe her encounter with the Baptizer.

Continue Reading… Signs of a Fresh Outpouring of the Holy Spirit

Reality Check: Don’t Forget Your Persecuted Brothers

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Last week many of
our brothers and sisters lost their lives for Christ. How should we respond to
the cry of the martyrs?

Last
week while millions of Americans crammed into theaters to see Alice in
Wonderland
in 3-D, many Christians in other parts of the world were
attacked, raped or killed for the cause of the gospel.

This
past weekend I received an urgent message from my friend Christopher Alam, a
U.S.-based evangelist, who was writing from Southeast Asia to inform me of a terrible
atrocity in Myanmar.

Continue Reading… Reality Check: Don’t Forget Your Persecuted Brothers

Do You Need Some Holy Ghost Dr?no?

We can’t reach
the younger generation with yesterday’s stale religion. It’s time to unclog our
wells.

Last
week I spoke to a group of ministry leaders associated with a particular
Pentecostal denomination in South Carolina. Many of these men and women are
hungry for a fresh move of God, but they are also aware that they aren’t
effectively reaching people for Christ. Most of their small congregations are
getting grayer by the day.

I
told these folks they have only two options: Change or die.

Continue Reading… Do You Need Some Holy Ghost Dr?no?

Don’t Try to Tame the Holy Ghost

Too often the American church has tried to put the Third Person of the Trinity in a box.

Hundreds of years before the Holy Spirit was poured out on the early church on the day of Pentecost, the Old Testament prophet Ezekiel, newly anointed as a priest, got a free preview of how God would send the Holy Spirit to empower His people. The preview came in the form of a Technicolor vision that included a stormy wind, a cloud that glowed with fire, flashes of lightning and strange, four-faced cherubim that were empowered by God’s divine energy.

Ezekiel wrote of these heavenly creatures: “In the midst of the living beings there was something that looked like burning coals of fire, like torches darting back and forth among the living beings. The fire was bright, and lightning was flashing from the fire. And the living beings ran to and fro like bolts of lightning” (Ezekiel 1:13-14, NASB).

Continue Reading… Don’t Try to Tame the Holy Ghost

Private Pain, Public Trust: Why Leaders Must Be Open About Failure

Christians were
shocked last week after learning that Benny and Suzanne Hinn are divorcing. Do
ministers owe us an explanation for their failures?

Judging by the calls and e-mails I received last week, charismatic
Christians were confused and dismayed when the Los Angeles Times broke
the news that healing evangelist Benny Hinn and his wife, Suzanne, are getting
divorced. The comments I heard were mostly sympathetic: “I am so grieved.”
“This is a wake-up call.” “This is heartbreaking.” “I’m praying for the Hinns.”

And a few people were angry: “What is happening?” “Here we go
again.” “This is why the secular world looks at us and laughs!”

Continue Reading… Private Pain, Public Trust: Why Leaders Must Be Open About Failure

The Lord Will Make a ‘Rehoboth’ for You

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If you find
yourself in an anxious season of difficult transition, take comfort from the
life of Isaac.

If you had told
me seven years ago that I would resign my comfortable magazine job in 2010 and
make a shift toward public ministry, I would have asked if you were smoking an
illegal plant. I liked my paycheck and my benefits. And in 2004 I was trying to
figure out how I would put four kids through college when I had no extra money
in the bank.

Fast forward to
2010, to the middle of the Great Recession. They say the economy is showing
signs of improvement, but I don’t see this in Florida, where the foreclosure
rate is still one of the nation’s highest. Yet right in the middle of these
uncertain economic times, while the unemployment rate is hovering around 10
percent, I sensed God telling me to make a career change.

Continue Reading… The Lord Will Make a ‘Rehoboth’ for You

Mountains, Molehills and Tim Tebow’s Super Bowl Ad

Why did an
innocent statement about protecting unborn life unleash a national uproar?
Today’s feminist groups need a reality check.

I’m not sure what
the folks at Planned Parenthood expected football star Tim Tebow to do in his
long-awaited Super Bowl ad on Sunday night. Condemn women to hell if they’ve
had abortions? Show photos of aborted fetuses? Wave a gun at abortionists?

Tebow is a big
guy, but both of his ads were polite and harmless—maybe even too safe. And the
22-year-old Heisman Trophy winner appeared in the 30-second ads with his mother,
for crying out loud. She was even holding his baby picture!

Why did this ad
cause so much hyperventilation?

Continue Reading… Mountains, Molehills and Tim Tebow’s Super Bowl Ad

Uncommon Courage During Haiti’s Crisis

How
a Pennsylvania pastor led a four-man team into the quake zone in Port-au-Prince
to save a handful of orphans.

Psalm 27 was posted on the orphanage wall.

At
the Rescue Children Orphanage in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, a small sign was
hanging on one of the building’s concrete walls on Jan. 12, the day the city
was leveled by a devastating earthquake. It was a verse from Psalm 27, written
in English and Creole: “When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord
will take care of me.”

Those
words have rich meaning today, not only to the 11 children in that orphanage
who survived the quake but to Randy Landis, a charismatic pastor from
Allentown, Pa., who helped lead a dangerous search-and-rescue mission when he
learned about the calamity. He knew the children had survived the quake, but
when phones went dead he had no idea if they had food, water or protection from
falling debris. So Landis and a small team of men from Lifechurch of Allentown
sprang into action.

Continue Reading… Uncommon Courage During Haiti’s Crisis

Recovering the Axe Head of Genuine Anointing


We’ve faked the power of Pentecost long enough. Let’s set aside the imitations and reclaim the real deal.

Shortly after Elijah was carried to heaven in his fiery chariot, a group of young prophets asked Elisha to go with them to build new living quarters near the Jordan River. While one of the young men was cutting down a tree, the blade of his axe fell in the water and sank into the murky depths of the riverbed (see 2 Kings 6:1-7).

The construction project came to an abrupt stop. This was before the days of flashlights and sonar devices. These guys were in trouble.

Continue Reading… Recovering the Axe Head of Genuine Anointing

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