Spiritfire Proverbs 26:27 “Rock & Roll”

“If a man digs a pit, he will fall into it;
If a man rolls a stone, it will roll back on him.”
 
Oh this was a fun one!  We said our prayers inviting the Holy Spirit to teach us and show us how Jesus fulfilled the book of Proverbs.  We boldly said our declaration of: “I am a child of God!  He loves me, so I love me!”  We then took a moment and said our introduction that we’ve been using for at least 10 years and read our next verse, Proverbs 26:27.
 
Immediately we were confronted with a popular scene in many Western movies, when the antagonist makes his victim dig his own grave.  The footnote in my Bible compares it to Psalm 7:16, “The trouble he causes recoils on himself.”  If not for a villain’s command, why would anyone dig a pit?  Was it like the Psalm inferred or was it for a trap?  For us, we looked at it like ‘the more you keep on talking, the deeper you dig.’  The point was, “Stop digging!” For whatever the plan, it will not turn out like you think it will.
 
The next part of the Proverb came out as a scene from an Indiana Jones movie, The Raiders of the Lost Ark.  But instead of Indiana rolling the stone in place, it was rolling after him!  What does the stone the Proverb mentioned represent?  Unlike for a boobytrap to protect a religious cultural artifact, the rock can represent regrets the man would rather hide.
 
We ended with our favorite question, “How did Jesus fulfill the book of Proverbs to make us into new creations, 2 Corinthians 5:17?”  We were brought right to Jesus’ empty tomb, John 20:1.  Here the rock didn’t roll back upon us, for our trouble was removed by the Blood of the Lamb, Hebrews 8:12.

10th Anniversary of briancarter.link

This year marks the 10th since starting this website back in 2015.  Wow a lot has happened in a decade!  God has been very faithful to my family and I and has marked our days with His blessings.  I hope this website is proof of that.  The biggest “Wow!” or SMOT – Special Moment of Today (or rather Decade), has been how the 182 was used throughout my and my family’s life.  From being the reason for songs I’ve written, discovering a gift idea, uncovering how an international community can interact with the Divine, to growth in personal faith and vocabulary, the 182 is more than Coconut Cove’s backstory or a connecting theme for random stuff I just made up (like “Sign Spotting Day”.)  

 
I’m excited to see what God has in store for my family and I as we are daily carving out our path with Him.
 
Another big “WOW!” or SMOD – Special Moment of the Decade, has been Spiritfire.  Uncovering the ‘why’ behind the teachings of Jesus has been so unbelievably powerful.  Every time my family gathered around God’s Word, we witnessed literally ‘how’ through Jesus’ work fulfilling the book of Proverbs (The wisdom of God through which He created the heavens and the earth), we are made into new creations, 2 Corinthians 5:17.  Another Way apart from the Law has been found to communicate the power of the Gospel, (I think Paul would’ve approved had he seen.)  Can this bridge the gap between ‘wisdom’ based religions?  Can Jesus’ fulfillment of Proverbs bring together future generations distanced from Christianity by the sacrificial system?  Or maybe letting pastor’s talk about their relationship with God through the 182 can be a helpful dialogue as sin is dismantling the unity of the Church?
 
I’m excited to see what God has in store for my family and I as we are daily carving out our path with Him.
 
It is no secret I am not interested in revivals.  They are too easily forgotten.  I am interested in opening a door, one that will change the system we’ve become too comfortable with.  A new door never seen before or even whispered about, from academic towers to poverty’s hovels and holes in the ground.  There is more than we will ever know and only seeking eyes will see it.
 
The 182 has always been a path of suffering leading to glory.
Spiritfire has been a path of becoming leading to new creation.
 
As you follow my family and I as we ‘walk on water’ after Jesus, may you also be blessed and…  excited to see what God has in store for you and your family as you are daily carving out your path with Him.

Spiritfire, Proverbs 26:18 “The Dark Proverbs”

“Like a madman shooting
     firebrands or deadly arrows
is a man who deceives his neighbor
     and says, “I was only joking!”
 
Many of the proverbs in chapter 26, and maybe on a closer look all of them, reveal a bit of the other side.  I feel it must be noted with a title, ‘the dark proverbs’.  They show how one works to bring power, of a kind, into their own life by use of tools that bring about a fool’s inheritance, ‘chaos.’  No one is blessed by this power, and like a villain who blames the victim for their own misfortune, a madman deceives others in the ‘light’ of his fiery arrows with sarcasm.  Through it, a person places the blame on the other who doesn’t get it.  It was a joke, “You’re supposed to laugh, not take me seriously,” says the comedian.  The audience member who doesn’t join with the crowd and laugh at the flames now burning up their fields is the one with the problem.  With thinking like this, the virgin who has kept themselves pure for their spouse, or those who abstain from loose living, are seen as less than those that don’t.  After all, as I have heard said by many ‘madmen’ preachers, “Hell is full of the virtuous.”
 
Then we brought the true Light by asking the question, “How did Jesus fulfill this proverb?”  The One who truly brings blessings to the hearer, Who doesn’t shoot deadly arrows with His words, but Life.  He took the madman’s arrows and their power to end life and, though innocent, died a sinner’s death.  On the third day He was raised, 1 Corinthians 15:4-8.  Then everyone enflamed with the Holy Spirit’s light burns with the Light of revival purging away the dross and is like a city set on a hill, Matthew 5:14.

Spiritfire Proverbs 26:17, “Nunya Bizness”

“Like the one who seizes a dog by the ears
     is a passer-by who meddles in a
          quarrel not his own.”
 
After we prayed, said our declarations of, “I’m a child of God! He loves me so I love me!”, and recited our intro, my kids jumped in right away with this proverb. Between the three of them, they knew and sited a time when one stepped over the line and got involved in a conflict that they had no part in. We found out the dog’s name: “Nunya Bizness.”
 
We also talked about the “passer-by”, who we previously saw in v. 10, as a new character in the book of Proverbs. One who is ignorant of discernment and has no interest in either house, Wisdom’s or Folly’s. We spent a moment talking about their fate. “Are they better off not knowing what lies ahead?” I asked. Is that true in any case of life? Consider a path that contains signs along each side warning of falling rocks, or steep cliffs. What happens to those who ignore them? Or those who take the ‘blue pill’ in the movie, The Matrix? Are they protected somehow if they are obedient to the machine? Much like an eclipse that happens regardless of will or emotion, the fate of the ignorant is an early grave.
 
Then we came to the ‘REAL’ question: “How did Jesus fulfill this proverb?”  We then talked about the difference between ‘fulfilling’ and ‘obeying’ the proverbs. We then saw how it was Jesus who grabbed that dog’s ears and gave it a shake. The ‘quarrel not His own’ was the one between God and man, for Jesus was innocent, as in Hebrews 4:15. But unlike a passer-by or a Baha’i teacher, He didn’t detach Himself from this world but saved us from ‘Sin’, the dog’s REAL name, and faced its danger to that early grave. God raised Him from the dead and opened a Way for us and the passer-by to be saved, 2 Corinthians 5:14-21.  
 
We thanked God that Jesus, like in His parable of ‘the Good Samaritan”, Luke 10:25-37, was no passer-by, and made our salvation His business.