Tag Archives: God

Secular Songs Prove Inspirational

9 May

Posted By Jimmy Spencer

In music, to call a song secular means that it’s not religious, or at least it comes without a Christian name tag. While there are a variety of great worship songs in the Christian genre of music, I often find songs that aren’t intended to be songs of faith can be more inspirational.

In this post, I have highlighted a few (secular) songs in which I draw inspiration for my faith, even if the artist didn’t intend it in that way. Hopefully, you will enjoy them as well. (If anyone could connect me with Brandon Flowers or Brett Dennen, I’d love to interview them sometime.)


Brett Dennen – “There Is So Much More”
I wonder how so many can be in so much pain,
while others don’t seem to feel a thing.
Then I curse my whiteness
and I get so damn depressed.
In a world of suffering,
why should I be so blessed? Continue reading 

God’s Plans For Us Are Bigger Than Our Own Plans

3 May

Posted by Jimmy Spencer, witnessfaithcom@gmail.com

There are a few options when we don’t get what we want: We can pout. We can fight for it. Or we can give in, claiming that it wasn’t meant to be.

Christians or non-Christians, people often believe in the idea that things are predestined for them. And destiny, well that’s a strangely wild thought when you think about it. It means no control, or little control. The Lord declares, “For I know the plans I have for you. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” (Jeremiah 29:11)

He is in control. We pray for guidance, but if we have given our life to Him, He’s going to put us where he needs us.

But does that mean we give up on decision-making? Continue reading 

My Lesson In How To Pray

17 Apr


Posted By Jimmy Spencer

Let me emphasize this before you read: Everyone can and probably should pray in their own way. The following post hopefully will serve others as bits to help them in their own prayer.

I once Googled “how to pray.”

I really wanted to know. As a kid, I learned to clasp my hands together and recite words that had been told to me. Later on, selfishly, I learned to use prayer as a wish list.

“God, please let me pass this test.”

“God, please let this girl like me.”

“God, please let me be healthy.”

God was Santa Claus. Never did I ask God to forgive me. Never did I ask God to help others, unless I knew someone who was sick – then I’d put it on the wish list.

So when I began to find a stronger faith within the last year, I started to think more and more about prayer. I was building a stronger foundation of faith, reading the Bible and trying to hold myself accountable to God’s word. Continue reading 

Miracles

11 Apr



Written by Sophie Aust

Dreams are like miracles.

You can have 25 dreams a night and not remember a single one of them. Likewise, you can spend your entire life trying to disprove miracles, but you cannot keep them from happening.

Miracles are happening all around us, and we shut our eyes to them. Miracles happen when we would rather cover our ears and hum than listen to God. When we force God to pull out the big guns. When He steps down from heaven and makes flowers grow out of our dreadful compost of a life.

I know this, because I often try to ignore God. In Kari Jobe’s Revelation Song, she describes being “Filled with wonder at the mention of your name.” I personally cannot relate to this. When I hear God’s name mentioned, my most common response is to run in the opposite direction. My life has been filled with miracle after miracle; God trying desperately to get my attention and show his deep love for me. I run away and come back, again and again, but God’s love is relentless. No matter how hard we try to ignore miracles, God continues to make them happen.

I am constantly faced with miracles the size of tiny birds. Miracles that are hardly more than coincidence. God does not usually speak to me in the thunder and lightning. Instead, God quietly reminds me that he takes care of the entire universe, and that universe includes me. I experienced the most memorable of these miracles in October of 2011 after a horrific seizure. I have suffered with anxiety my entire life, but we did not acknowledge it until I began to have dangerous physical symptoms such as twitching, paralysis, and intense seizures. The first of these seizures occurred during a school rally when I fell off a high bleacher and began shaking uncontrollably. I had to pull on one of my friend’s legs in order for anybody to notice anything at all. This was hugely disturbing to me. Not only had I had a potentially dangerous seizure, but none of my friends even noticed.

The next day was a Saturday, and I spent the entire day in a cold sweat of anxiety. My family is part of a church small-group, and every month we meet at each others’ houses for dinner. This particular Saturday, we were meeting at the fanciest, richest house of the entire group. I was completely overwhelmed. I don’t think I said over five words throughout the entire dinner, and I was eager to get home early. Then I saw my best friend, Brandon, sneak into the dark living room. Brandon is a silent, awkward sophomore at Alameda High. Not one to talk much, he spends most of his time playing MineCraft on his laptop. He has been one of my best friends for my whole life, but we have never once had a truly serious conversation. On a whim, I followed him into the huge, pitch dark living room. He was sitting and playing on his Nintendo DS. I sat on the armchair across from him. We were quiet for a long time, not talking, just listening to each others’ thoughts, communicating without any words, knowing we had both escaped for the exact same reason. After a while he invited me to watch him play. We sat on the squashy red couch together and watched his little boxy character battle monsters and collect Pokemon. Soon we were talking, discussing weird dreams and awkward friends, embarrassing moments, bad teachers. I don’t think I’ve ever laughed so hard as I did on that one night.

When I was the absolute furthest from God, He picked me up and stuck me back on my feet. With the help of an empty room, a Nintendo DS, and Brandon VanGelder, God put my pieces back together. There were no tears, no wild embracing, no promises to be a better person, none of that. But that night in late October was nothing less than a miracle.

In his book Tattoos on the Heart, Father Greg Boyle calls miracles “Music with nothing playing”. Like the story of Elijah, God was not in the fire, the earthquake, or the wind storm. God was no less than the faintest whisper. But that whisper was more precious than any praise song or devotion. He was there, and He was taking extreme actions to show that I was extraordinarily loved.

Miracles are constantly happening. The air is thick with them. God sends us these sudden, breath-taking moments to stick us back in the right direction. The more we try to run away, to forget, to believe that we are no good, God continues to call us back, saying that we are worth it and He has a plan. God uses miracles to say that He doesn’t just love us, He is madly and irrevocably IN LOVE with us. And that is all that we ever need to know.

Faith Without Deeds Is Not Faith

6 Apr

Posted by Jimmy Spencer

Often, I am guilty of waiting to hear from God. I could just imagine what He’d really say: “Really, buddy? Why don’t you pick up that book called The Bible that’s been sitting next to your TV remote.”

So, when I grabbed my Bible and decided to read The Letter of James, I shouldn’t have been surprised that everything He had to tell me was already perfectly worded and set to be read. On this night, it was through James that God spoke to me. “Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says” (James 1:22).

This was an idea that was plugged into me during the beginning of my faith journey – the idea that it was not enough to just be a
Christian, rather that we must act as Christians. Later in James, this concept is one again slammed home. “What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them?” (James 2:14). Continue reading 

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