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Rewards Of Fasting

Mar 28, 2012
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THE REWARDS OF FASTING BY MIKE BICKLE (excerpt from Introduction)
The Holy Spirit is readying the Bride of Christ—the Body of Christ—at this time for the coming days of glory and opposition. How radically the Lord must change the Church to prepare her for His return! What the Western Church today accepts as normal values and practices will be dramatically altered as our minds are renewed and we are transformed into the people God originally designed us to be.
By definition, fasting is abstaining from food. The fast that we are after, however, goes far beyond just denying ourselves physical nourishment. Our desire is to position our hearts to encounter Jesus as the Bridegroom.
What He delights in is our obedience and our pursuit of intimacy with Him. More important to Him than fasting is that we do His will.
When we fast it must be as a means to an end rather than as an end in itself.
Scripture teaches us to fast to strengthen us in our quest to be preoccupied with God and His will.
Jesus promised that God would openly reward those who approach fasting with the right spirit. Fasting is a grace that significantly increases our receptivity to the Lord’s voice and His Word. It allows us to enter into depths in our relationships with God that are beyond what we normally experience.



THE REWARDS OF FASTING BY MIKE BICKLE (excerpt from Chapter One)
There is a growing hunger and desperation that flows from the Body of Christ’s recognition that we are spiritually barren. We understand that we are in great need of the in-breaking of God’s love and power. As a result, there is clearly a growing enthusiasm for fasting, even fasting as a lifestyle.

This new interest in fasting is God’s gift to the Body of Christ. It is part of God’s commitment to prepare the Church for the soon coming time of glory and crisis in the End Times. This ready response is surely the work of God in our midst. And it is unmistakably in line with the Word of God. With boldness Jesus emphasized that the Father rewards fast. This proclamation alone makes fasting of great importance to the true followers of Jesus. It is not secondary. The grace of fasting must not be neglected.

There is a tension in fasting and living the fasted lifestyle. While God does reward fasting, the rewards He gives are not earned or deserved by us because of our fasting. We are weak people who can never earn God’s favor or rewards, but can only receive them. We give ourselves to the grace of fasting by positioning ourselves before His infinite goodness. He wants to flood our lives with many rewards—rewards that are internal as our hearts encounter Him, external as our circumstances are touched by His power, and eternal as fasting impacts even our eternal rewards.

Truly the rewards that the Father gives to those who fast regularly are vast. And that is why, even now, He is preparing the hearts of believers worldwide to say “yes” to the New Testament lifestyle of prayer and fasting. He will prepare us as we experience Jesus’ affection as our Bridegroom God. Our ability to experience more of our glorious God is deeply connected to our embracing the grace of fasting.

Deep within the human heart is the desire to know that we are loved and valued.The dilemma is that though our desire for love is real, and though we are innately designed by God to be exhilarated by His love and acceptance of us, there remains a distance between the knowledge of this love and our actual experience of it. Believe it or not, fasting is one of the most practical ways to posture our hearts to experience more of God’s affection and love.

The gap between knowing that God loves us and actually experiencing that love is rooted in living from a false identity based on the way people receive us rather than on how God receives us. How we think and feel about ourselves is greatly impacted by those whose opinions we value most.

Our Creator is the only One who fully knows who we were designed to be. He tells us who we really are by revealing how much He loves us. Our belief in His affection for us determines how we feel about ourselves, how we approach life, how we interact with others, and how we deal with setbacks and difficulties. God wants our identity and sense of value to be rooted and grounded in the knowledge of His affections for us (Eph. 3:17-18). This is where our hearts come alive!

Jesus described the Kingdom of God as a wedding, and the Father as the One arranging a glorious marriage for His Son (Matt. 22) This is the highest revelation of the Kingdom of God. It is the revelation of Jesus as our Bridegroom God and of us as His cherished Bride. It is through receiving the taking to heart this revelation that the gap is closed and the dilemma is solved in our experience of God’s love.

The Holy Spirit’s final emphasis before Jesus’ Second Coming will be on the intimate relationship between Him and His Bride (Rev.22:17) John described the Church as being in deep unity with the Holy Spirit at that time, saying and doing what the Spirit is saying and doing. She will have completely assumed her identity as the Bride and will be fully participating in the bridal longing for the Bridegroom to come, to return.

The final prophecy reveals not only what the Holy Spirit’s primary activities will be in the coming days, but also three key things that will happen in and through the Church. (1) The Church will be anointed with the Spirit. The Spirit will rest on the Church in great power and revelation. (2) The Church will be deeply engaged in intercession, crying out, “Come, Lord Jesus.” (3) The Church will be established in her bridal identity.

The bridal paradigm views the Kingdom through the eyes of a Bride whose love is loyal, wholehearted and devoted. It is the bridal perspective of the Kingdom of God.

As sons of God, heirs of His power, we are given a position that allows us to experience God’s throne (Rev. 3:21; Rom. 8:17).

As Christ’ Bride, we are in a position to experience God’s heart—His emotions, affections, and desire for us. We must understand that being His Bride points to a position of privileged nearness that enables us to encounter His heart.

Being a “man after God’s own heart” implies that King David was a student of the emotions of God’s heart.

What empowered John the Baptist was the revelation he had of Jesus as the Bridegroom God. John spoke of hearing the voice of the Bridegroom as that which caused his heart to be overwhelmed with joy. (John 3).

The way we view ourselves is greatly impacted when we understand Jesus as a passionate Bridegroom. We begin to see ourselves as ones who have immense value to Him.

The Bridegroom message is a call to active intimacy with God. God has opened Himself up for us to understand and feel His emotions, desires, and affections. (Eph. 3:18-19)

It is true that God is angry at rebellion, but He has a heart of tenderness toward sincere believers who, though immature and weak, seek to obey Him. He enjoys us even in our weakness. He feels pleasure over us while we are growing, not just after we’ve matured.

Jesus is mostly glad when He interacts with sincere believers. Even in our weakness we can approach Him and be confident that He is glad to relate to us.

Jesus feels about us the same way the Father feels about Him (John 15:9). The depth of the Father’s love for Jesus is unfathomable.

Love is not passive and the God of affection is an all-consuming fire (Deut. 4:24). His jealousy for us is as demanding as the grace, a most powerful flame, the very flame of God (Song. 8:6-7). Jesus wants the entirety of our hearts and He will continue to jealousy pursue every aspect of our lives until we are fully His. Out of His zeal come His judgments, which destroy all that opposes love and all that injures His Church (Prov. 6:34; Ezek. 38:18-19; Zech. 1:14; 8:2; Rev. 19:2).

The God who created Heaven and Earth is a Bridegroom whose heart burns in holy love for His Bride. The God who possesses all power desires intimacy with human beings. Only when we understand Jesus’ great desire for us can we understand who we really are. We are His eternal companions. He shares with us that which the Father has given Him.

When we come face to face with the extravagant affections of God, the very core of our being is impacted. This internal impact is what we are after. It is what changes our lives.

Living according the reality of Jesus being our heavenly Bridegroom and viewing ourselves as His cherished Bride is the only way we can prepare for the Lord’s return. It is our only hope of filling the void of our loneliness and rejection.

We do not naturally live in this identity, though it is the highest revelation of who we are before Him.

The Lord will unveil Himself as a Bridegroom and He will do it through prayer and fasting. God beckons us to come near Him. Oh, that we would respond to this invitation wholeheartedly.

The only logical response to God’s extravagant love for us is one of wholehearted love, characterized by denying ourselves. As we do, we will lay hold of the highest things God has for us. This present age is but a brief window in eternity. This life is but one small “moment” we have to respond in full obedience and love to Jesus. In loving Him, we seek to obey Him at any cost. In responding to His love, we receive all that He longs to pour into our lives. Jesus said that if we love Him we will keep His commandments. (John 14).

His first command is to love God with all our heart (Matt. 22). Before the Lord returns, the Church worldwide will be passionately in love with God and living abandoned lifestyles of happy holiness.

How do we grow from immature love to blazing, abandoned love for God? We dive headlong into the revelation of His desire for us. In faith, we must receive the testimony of His unyielding affection for us. We must remember that our God is a God of gladness who loves us and likes us. Our love for Him will grow as we take to heart this foundational principle regarding His feelings for us.

It is the indescribably beauty of Jesus, the Bridegroom God, that fascinates our hearts just as it did David’s. David desired one thing above all: to behold God’s beauty (Ps. 27:4).

Fasting enlarges our capacity to receive truth, and accelerates the process of God’s truths taking root in our own hearts. It is a God-given way to make room for more of God and therefore is an essential component to the age-old question of “How do I grow in love for God?”

In order to grow in love, our capacity for God must increase, and in order for our capacity to increase, we need to incorporate the practice of fasting into our lives. Fasting fuels our experience of God’s love.
 
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strelok0017

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Good article. Hunger for God must overpower the hunger for food and drinks in our lives. That's the only way to live a Godly life. God is willing so the question is if we are willing too. I do not really believe that fasting is meritorious but that if it is done in faith, God may be pleased to do things in our lives and in the lives of those we wish to see saved.
 
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strelok0017, it is nice to know that somebody actually read the article. :D



THE REWARDS OF FASTING BY MIKE BICKLE (excerpt from Chapter Two)
God has set up His Kingdom in such a way that some things that seem the weakest to people are actually the most powerful before God.
Without the mindset of Christ, it is difficult to understand the wisdom of a lifestyle of prayer and fasting. Yet there is truly nothing more powerful to which we could give our lives. God’s kingdom is governed by prayer. When we give ourselves to prayer and fasting, it affects the spiritual realm, even the activity of angels and demons.

In fact, the place of prayer is the governmental center of the universe, but the reality is that the spirit of prayer is foreign to the human spirit unless we are experiencing God’s grace (Zech. 12:10) The Christian life requires cooperation with God in His grace.

God will not do our part and we cannot do His part. Our part includes making quality decisions to deny ourselves (say no to sin and pride); to feed our spirit on the Word; to ask for Divine help and intervention through prayer with fasting; and to embrace godly activities (ministry, service) and relationships. God’s part includes releasing supernatural influences on our hearts (power, wisdom, desires); on our bodies (healing); on our circumstances (provision, protection, direction); and on our relationships (favor).

God governs the universe in intimate partnership with His people through intercession., He has chosen to give His people a dynamic role in determining some of our quality of life, based on our response to the grace of God, particularly in prayer, fasting, obedience and meekness. God opens doors of blessing and closes doors of oppression in response to prayer.

There are 3 steps in our partnership with God. First, God initiates what He wants by declaring it in His Word and stirring our hearts to believe for it. Second, we respond in obedience with prayer and fasting. Third, God answers our response by releasing that for which we have cried out. Our prayers matter greatly, even when we do not feel their power. Some people “trust” the sovereignty of God in a non-biblical way by “trusting” God to do the role He has assigned to us. This is not trust; it is presumption. It is true that His big plan for the broad strokes of history will not be thwarted, but there are many things that God will not give us individually until we pursue them in faith and obedience.

The foundation of intercession, which is a form of prayer, is to say back to God what He first says to us, either from Scripture or from personal prophetic information given to us by the Holy Spirit (1 Tim. 1:18). Prayer causes us to internalize God’s Word as we speak His ideas back to Him. Each time we say back to God what He has declared to us, it marks our spirit, illuminates our mind and tenderizes our heart. Our character is transformed. All this happens as we engage in intercession, because God’s words are spirit and life (John 6:63). God’s requirement that we pray reflects His desire for intimate partnership and connection with us.

Prayer and fasting are spiritual weapons we use to actively resist Satan.

FOUNDATIONAL PRINCIPLES OF BIBLCAL FASTING
(1) Fasting is an invitation. God invites us to fast because He wants us to want more of Him. If we say “yes” to Him in fasting, God uses this response as a doorway to bring us into greater measures of encountering His heart. There are blessings that will only be released when our spiritual hunger reaches the point that we want to fast in order to receive more of God. He rewards hunger and imparts more grace to those who are hungry for more of Him.

(2) Fasting is a paradox: as we experience weakness in our flesh, we are strengthened in our spirit. When we fast, the props we use to simulate ourselves are removed; the things that give us the illusion of strength are temporarily gone. Sometimes when fasting, we feel raw before God as we become even more aware of our sinful motives and passions. The paradox is that as we experience the pain of this rawness, our spirit is tenderized. Our bodies are weak and hungry, but our spirit-man is more sensitive to the Holy Spirit. In all this, our resolve is strengthened to live wholly for God.

(3) Fasting is a grace. We will sustain a life of fasting only by God’s grace, not by our own strength. Fasting is more than gritting our teeth as we endure it. Instead, we ask God for grace to enter into the mystery of connecting with Him in fasting. As we embrace the voluntary weakness of fasting, we receive more spiritual strength in our walk with God. His grace multiplies to those who pursue it.

God truly gives grace to fast. We tell ourselves that fasting is too hard, and that we will be too tired and uncomfortable, when in actuality the FEAR of fasting is far worse than the fasting itself.
As we fast on a regular basis, a change in our mindset and the rhythm of our bodies begins to set in. This is one expression of the grace of fasting.
There is no easier time than right now to say “yes” to this grace and to partner with God in it, to develop a history in prayer and fasting. Certainly, as the pressure at the end of the age increase, a greater percentage of Christians will enter into the grace of fasting than ever before.


(4) Fasting is humbling. Scripture describes fasting as humbling to or afflicting one’s soul. King David spoke of fasting as one way he humbled himself before God.
Suddenly we find ourselves unable to do even the most normal tasks well—things we have always taken for granted. It humbles us to fast. This is how God planned it.

(5) Fasting is worship. Only weak people fast and pray; only those who recognize their need for more of God fast. Fasting unto the Lord is a declaration of our great need of Him. We fast out of desire to be better equipped to pour out our lives fully to Him. This is precious to The Lord. When God’s people humble themselves through fasting so as to walk in greater purity, God receives this as worship.
SEVEN TYPES OF BIBLICAL FASTING
(1) Fasting to experience the power of God in personal ministry
(2) Fasting for prophetic revelation of the End Times
(3) Fasting for the fulfillment of God’s promises to our city/nation
(4) Fasting to stop a crisis
(5) Fasting for protection
(6) Fasting for direction
(7) Fasting for encounter and intimacy with God—the Bridegroom fast
 
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Astrid, Thanks for letting me know that one more person actually read the excerpts.


Hey, Niceguy, honest questions are always welcome.

Google two names: Mike Bickle; Jentezen Franklin.
These two do lead their whole churches to do regular fasting.


Why is not fasting a common practice? I will let my fellow Christians answer your question. By the way, are you really an atheist? You sound like a preacher trying to get Christians to repent for lack of fasting.


What do you mean by “seeing how the Bible talks about fasting”? How does the Bible talk about fasting in your view?
 
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THE REWARDS OF FASTING BY MIKE BICKLE (excerpt from Chapter THREE #1)

Then the disciples of John came to him, saying, “Why do we and the Pharisees fast, but your disciples do not fast?” And Jesus said to them, “Can the wedding guests mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them? The days will come when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast. No one puts a piece of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch tears away from the garment, and a worse tear is made. Neither is new wine put into old wineskins. If it is, the skins burst and the wine is spilled and the skins are destroyed. But new wine is put into fresh wineskins, and so both are preserved.” (Matt. 9)
Jesus was referring to Himself as the Bridegroom who would be taken from them by dying on the cross. He implied that then His disciples would fast with the same consistency and intensity that John’s disciples did. Their fasting, however, would flow out of longing and mourning for Jesus as a Bridegroom. Jesus used their question to introduce Himself as a Bridegroom. He was introducing a new paradigm of fasting—a fast motivated by desire to encounter His beautiful and loving presence.

In the OT, fasting was usually an expression of sorrow over sin or a plea for God to physically deliver His people from disaster.
Now the Lord was saying there was something new. After His death, after the New Covenant had been established, fasting would take on a whole new dimension. The indwelling Holy Spirit in each believer would make this possible. The fast His disciples would enter into would be one related to intimacy with Jesus as the Bridegroom.

In the New Covenant, God opened the depths of His heart to every believer through the Holy Spirit (1 Cor.2:10-12; Heb. 10:19-22). It is a privilege beyond comprehension that weak humans can experience the depths of God’s heart. This is our inheritance and our destiny. We must never be content to live without a growing experience of God’s heart.

The apostles experienced this intimacy of knowing the Man Christ Jesus while He walked the Earth. Jesus insisted they not fast during this time, but rejoice. Just as there will be no fasting in the age to come because we will be face to face with Him, it would have been unnecessary for the disciples to fast when God was their daily companion.

The promise of the New Covenant was still the apostles’—intimacy with Jesus—but His physical presence was gone. They longed for Him, for His nearness. When the overflowing gladness of His immediate presence was taken from them, they were heartsick. Then they fasted.

A heart that does not mourn for more of Him is a heart that accepts its current state of spiritual barrenness as tolerable and livable. A mourning heart is fiercely discontent; it has a desperate hunger for God. This is the Bridegroom fast.

The Bridegroom fast is focused on desire; both understanding God’s desire for us and awakening our own desire for Him. God imparts new desires to us as He answers existent ones. The hope of a lovesick heart will not be disappointed, for Jesus promised that we would be satisfied as we mourn for more of Him (Matt. 5:4, 6).

Spiritual hunger is a divine gift that leads us to seek greater experiences of His love, regardless of the cost.

First, in the initial stages, God romances us, lets us feel His love stir within us. Though this brings a certain satisfaction to our souls, it also awakens a deeper longing and hunger for more. Once we taste just a little of God’s presence, we cannot live without more of Him. This is the way God planned it. Hunger begets hunger and deep calls unto dep. In every satisfaction God brings to us, we are left with an even greater hunger for more of Him. It is by our hunger that He leads us into the fullness of Love. We fast in response to the groan in our hearts for more of God.

We were made to live in joy, but that joy can be found only in the Person and presence of Jesus. Joy apart from Jesus is no joy at all.

Mourning and fasting for the Bridegroom is our way of positioning our hearts to live by desire for God and not by the lusts of this age. Our mourning for Him gives witness that we are not of this world and that we refuse to come under the seductions of Satan, the ruler of this world. It is in His coming that our highest joy will be found (Ps. 119:19-20; Rom. 8:23-25; Heb. 11:16). Until that day, however, we will continue to groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for Him to come once again.

The purpose of the Bridegroom fast goes even beyond yearning for Jesus’ return—it is the yearning to experience His presence now. In the midst of the delay, the waiting between His first and second Coming, God allows us to experience a measure of His presence. He has sent the Holy Spirit so we can encounter His presence and love in measure even now. The Bridegroom fast enlarges our hearts to experience that divine love and presence now.

God has designed us so that when we give ourselves to Him by fasting and reading the Word, our capacity to receive more of Him increases. No other dimension in the grace of God opens wide the deepest places of our beings like fasting and filling our hearts with the Scriptures that emphasize the truths of Jesus as our Bridegroom. Fasting serves as a catalyst to increase the depth and the measure to which we receive from the Lord. By fasting we receive greater measures of revelation at an accelerated pace, which has a deeper impact upon our hearts.

One of the primary purposes of the Bridegroom fast is to cause our hearts to move in love and longing for God. We do not fast in an attempt to make God pay attention to us, but to fully enter into the affection and presence of God that is already ours in Christ. It is not to move His heart but to move our own. Our hearts are prone to dullness and lethargy, and if we don’t deliberately confront that dullness, we become hardened without realizing it. The Bridegroom fast tenderizes our hearts so dullness is diminished and we are able to experience the affections of God in greater measure. Our hearts become tender and our desire is nurtured as we experience the pleasure of knowing Him.

Spiritual hunger is a divine agent that leads us to greater love. We cannot enter into the fullness of love without the preparatory impact of mourning for more of Him.

Our desire for Jesus creates the mourning or the pain of lovesickness, which in turn compels us to make changes in our lives so that we can receive all that is ours in God. We are wounded in love because He intentionally withholds a measure of His presence in order to bring us into greater intimacy as He works humility and produces meekness in us so God’s nearness is sustained in us for the long term.
 
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THE REWARDS OF FASTING BY MIKE BICKLE (excerpt from Chapter THREE #2)
The Bridegroom fast also brings holiness to our souls. Fasting for spiritual renewal includes mourning over the sin that hinders our relationship with Him. The increase of lovesickness for God inevitably causes a conviction within and we become unable to tolerate anything that opposes the life of God in us. No longer are we content to live in compromise or sin—we surrender everything because lovesickness compels us. Fasting is meant to afflict our souls as we renounce everything that sets itself up against the knowledge of God’s love and power in our lives (Is. 58:3-5; Ps. 27:4; 35:13; 69:10).

Fasting because of love exposes the compromises in our hearts and our ungodly dependence on worldly things. It is a way of keeping our hearts spiritually awake and alert in a dark world that naturally dulls and defiles the human spirit. Our love for God must be expressed in our quest to pursue total obedience (John 14:21).
One key way to sustain our love in God as we seek to live righteously is to wage war with the lusts inside us. Lust has many different expressions, including pride, anger, covetousness, theft, immorality, pornography, bitterness, hatred, slander, jealousy, drunkenness, over-indulgence with food or entertainment, legal and illegal addictions, and others (Mark7:21-22; Gal. 5:19-21; 1 John 2:16-17).
“Beloved, I beg you as sojourners and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul.” (1 Peter 2:11)
So, mourning for the Bridegroom also involves repentance.
“Turn to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning. So rend your heart…for He is gracious and merciful.” (Joel 2:12-13)
As we fast with hearts tender toward the Lord, we are kept in the position of continually rending our hearts and inviting the Holy Spirit to search us, to see if there is any wicked way in us. Fasting is a God-given gift that helps us break out of the cares of this life and the corruption of sin and darkness. It enables us to get free from the grip of our culture’s seductions that we might lay hold of the purpose for which God laid hold of us (Phil.3:12).

Anyone who desires to live a life characterized by fasting must begin with a high vision, a vision to experience the fullness of what God wants to give each of us in this age. We fast because we cannot endure living in spiritual barrenness. The person who fasts understands the gap between what God wants to give them and what they are actually experiencing. When we recognize that there is a realm in God to which we are invited but not yet experiencing, we become ruined. This state of “ruinedness” is an essential part of the lifestyle of fasting. Without a vision or hope for attaining more in God, we will not fast.

The Church today needs a renewed vision of fasting. We need to recognize it as a gift from God that leads the human spirit into fascination and exhilaration before Him. God has given us the grace of the Bridegroom fast that we might maximize the privilege of encountering the Bridegroom God, Jesus. Fasting is not intended by God to be something we hate. It is a gift meant to tenderize our hearts and bring great change in our lives. Fasting expresses our vision and determination to have more of God and the pain of recognizing the ways in which we fall short. We fast because we believe God desires to take the vision He has marked in us with and bring it to fruition over time. We believe in Jesus’ promise that there truly are rewards given by His Father, and we refuse to live as though this promise were not true (Matt. 6:17-18).

No one puts a piece of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch tears away from the garment, and a worse tear is made. Neither is new wine put into old wineskins. If it is, the skins burst and the wine is spilled and the skins are destroyed. But new wine is put into fresh wineskins, and so both are preserved.” (Matt. 9)
It is notable that Jesus prophesied of new wineskins in the context of the Bridegroom fast. New wine speaks of the presence of the Holy Spirit and His impact on people as He releases power in us that causes us to rejoice in love. His wine is always new, for He continually imparts new and fresh revelation about God’s heart. It is not that the Scriptures are new, but that the discovery of or emphasis on certain Scriptures is new to a particular generation.

Right now, the Holy Spirit is raising up many men and women who are having and will have new and fresh encounters with Jesus. The end result will be an anointed company of people who have fascinated and lovesick hearts for Jesus. But where does such a company of believers fit in with the current culture of spiritual compromise in the Church?

New wineskins represent the new structures necessary to serve the people who have new wine experiences. The people of the new wine see God, themselves and their missions very differently than they did before they encountered Jesus as a Bridegroom. They have new values and new paradigms of the Kingdom. These newly lovesick believers need new structures, and these new structures must be governed by leaders who share the values that flow from experiencing the Bridegroom’s affections and power.

Jesus was prophesying that the old structures would break and the wine would spill out and be lost. The Lord soon replaced the exiting old wineskin (the religious synagogue structure) with a New Testament community of believers led by unlikely people, such as fishermen, ex-prostitutes and tax collectors. This principle of needing new wineskins for a new move of the Spirit has been repeated many times through history, and will be repeated again at the end of the age.

Today, the Holy Spirit again desires to pour out new wine—the active presence of the Bridegroom. God will give us everything He gave the early Church. In the generation in which the Lord returns, the miracles of the Book of Acts will be combined with the miracles of the Book of Exodus. When the Holy Spirit comes in full manifest power, whatever wineskins do not agree with Him will be ruined and broken. It is not possible to dwell with God except in unity with Him. The Holy Spirit wine will only be continually poured out into an environment or structure that is suited to Him. The wine of the newly emphasized truths the Holy Spirit highlights in a revival are often lost in old systems. Some of the old structures in this day will be revived and renewed. However, most will not. History shows that a new move of God is resisted by people. Great changes are coming in our experiences, as well as with our Church and ministry structures.

In the coming hour, untold millions will experience new dimensions of God’s heart and power as they encounter Him as the Bridegroom King and Judge. The religious structures of today are predominantly led by those who are not lovesick. They will not know what to do with ex-prostitutes and fishermen who are anointed with lovesickness. The Bridegroom fast is one of the vehicles through which this wave of lovesickness will overtake the Church, resulting in the creation of new structures to accommodate them. The revelation of Jesus as the Bridegroom, along with the Bridegroom fast, will be a vital part of transitioning from the old wineskin systems to New Testament Church structures and way of life.
 
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strelok0017

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Yep, fasting is a beautiful gift and should be done only to experience more of Christ or to seek Him for something that we are passionate for like revival or someone's salvation. Thanks a lot for the articles. If I may, I'd recommend a booklet by Franklin Hall called "Atomic Power With God". It's completely free. You can find it on Google. It's a challenging read in a sense but an eye opener too.
 
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strelok0017, thanks for the info. I read the first chapters of Franklin Hall's booklet. Yes he is powerful.

On the other hand, I think Mike Bickle has received what the Holy Spirit is saying to the churches in these last days leading to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. Mike Bickle appears to me to be more "up-to-date" in receiving revelations for the present days. No wonder, Mr. Hall was decades earlier than Bickle.
 
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Prayer and Fasting get rid of unbelief:

Matthew 17:20-21 NKJV
So Jesus said to them, "Because of your unbelief; for assuredly, I say to you, if you have faith as a mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move; and nothing will be impossible for you. [21] However, this kind (unbelief) does not go out except by prayer and fasting."
 
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