Dazzling Secrets for Despondent Saints
By Ken Chant
()
About this ebook
Every morning when you wake up you will groan, “Oh, if only it were evening!” and in the evening you will cry, “Oh, if only it were morning!” (De 28:66-67)
Does that describe you, or perhaps someone you know? Recent surveys suggest that 1 in 6 people will suffer a major depression in their lifetime. Fifty years ago the average age of people suffering from depression was 40; now it has fallen to the mid-20s. Among teen-agers, suicide is one of the most common causes of death; in some areas, it is the second most common cause.
What is the best remedy for depression? How can Christians maintain a life of continual victory? These pages will present some key ideas that can lift people out of the gloomy pit and keep them living in the sunshine of God’s love. You may not need help for yourself; yet there are probably people around you who are hurting. With these keys in your hand, you may be able to help them escape from darkness and come into light.
You may notice the absence of any section in this book dealing with the devil. That is not because I do not recognise his power to destroy human life. I understand full well that he comes, as Jesus said, only “to steal, kill, and destroy” (Jn 10:10). But despite common opinion, Satan is seldom the immediate cause of depression, and I felt he could be safely left out of these pages (apart from an occasional reference here and there.)
If you want to know more about the devil and demons, you should obtain my book on the subject, Demonology. (1) But here I am content to say only this much: the devil certainly does “go around seeking whom he may devour” (1 Pe 5:8-9), so we do need to take him into account. He may not often be the instigator of melancholy, but he and his minions do often try to take advantage of a gloomy state that already exists. Our duty, knowing that Satan can and does attack the saints (Re 13:7), is to resist him steadfastly in faith (Ja 4:7-8), confident of the victory that we have in Christ.
In his essay on the art of poetry Horace once said, “It is difficult to express ordinary ideas in a unique manner.” Yet that is what I have tried to achieve in these pages. You will no doubt make your own judgment about whether or not I have succeeded. I certainly hope at least that you will discover here (even if “few and far between”) some “subtle spells” akin to those described by Henry Kendall (2) in a lovely sonnet. He too had abandoned hope of perfection, and of complete originality. He was content in his latter years (as I am myself) to draw upon universal knowledge, and only occasionally to come delightedly upon scenes of wondrous beauty, which no other eye had before seen –
I proposed once to take my pen and write,
Not songs, like some, tormented and awry
With passion, but a cunning harmony
Of words and music caught from glen and height,
And lucid colours born of woodland light
And shining places where the sea-streams lie.
But this was when the heat of youth glowed white,
And since, I’ve put the faded purpose by.
I have no faultless fruits to offer you
Who read this book; but certain syllables
Herein are borrowed from unfooted dells
And secret hollows dear to noontide dew;
And these at least, though far between and few,
May catch the sense like subtle forest spells.
Ken Chant
Dr. Ken Chant (M.R.E. Th.D), is the President of Vision Christian College (Australia) and is on the International Board of Directors for Vision International University (USA). Dr Ken Chant is an Australian pentecostal pastor who was ordained in Melbourne in 1954. He has been actively involved in Christian ministry for over 50 years (ten of which he and his family spent in the USA). A brief summary of his ministry would include the following - He has pioneered eight churches and Pastored several others, including serving for five years as the associate pastor of what was then Australia's largest Pentecostal church (the Adelaide Crusade Centre). For several years he was the editor of two of Australia's most successful charismatic/Pentecostal journals. He has been the principal of four Bible colleges (in Australia and the USA), has taught at Christ for the Nations (Dallas), Oral Roberts University (Tulsa), Youth With a Mission (Hawaii), and spoken at crusades, conferences, and seminars in Australia, the UK, the USA, Mexico, the Philippines, Singapore, and New Zealand. Dr. Chant is the author of many of Vision's textbooks on Christian life, Doctrine and Theology.
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Dazzling Secrets for Despondent Saints - Ken Chant
Dazzling Secrets
for
Despondent Saints!
by Ken Chant
This version 2000
Published at Smashwords by Vision Colleges
Copyright © 2012 Ken Chant.
All rights reserved worldwide
ISBN 9781311051493
PO Box 84 Macquarie Fields
NSW, 2564, Australia
Ph 02 9603 2077
Fx 02 9603 3277
Email: contact@visioncolleges.net
http://www.visioncolleges.net
Contents
Diagnosis
Chapter 1: Natural And Physical
Chapter 2: Obeying God
Chapter 3: Break The Grip Of Shame
Chapter 4: Lack Of Vision
Chapter 5: Resisting Providence
Chapter 6: Discover Who You Are
Chapter 7: Made In God’s Image
Chapter 8: False Values
Chapter 9: True Prosperity
Chapter 10: Faith Under Fire
Chapter 11: Faith Under Fire
Chapter 12: Accepting Yourself
Chapter 13: Nice People, Nice Manners
Chapter 14: Living, Loving, Laughing!
Chapter 15: Yes! And Amen!
Bibliography
Endnotes
Abbreviations
More Books by Vision Colleges
College Information
A NOTE ON GENDER
It is unfortunate that the English language does not contain an adequate generic pronoun (especially in the singular number) that includes without bias both male and female. So he, him, his, man, mankind,
with their plurals, must often do the work for both sexes. Accordingly, although I have tried to avoid being improperly gender specific, I may not always have succeeded. So wherever it is appropriate to do so in the following pages, please include the feminine gender in the masculine, and vice versa.
FOOTNOTES
A work once fully referenced will thereafter be noted either by ibid
or op. cit.
ABBREVIATIONS
Abbreviations commonly used for the books of the Bible are found at the end of the book
* Ca is an abbreviation of Canticles, a derivative of the Latin name of the Song of Solomon, which is sometimes also called the Song of Songs.
Note: scripture translations are my own, unless otherwise noted.
DIAGNOSIS
(Return to Top)
Every morning when you wake up you will groan, Oh, if only it were evening!
and in the evening you will cry, Oh, if only it were morning!
(De 28:66-67)
Does that describe you, or perhaps someone you know? Recent surveys suggest that 1 in 6 people will suffer a major depression in their lifetime. Fifty years ago the average age of people suffering from depression was 40; now it has fallen to the mid-20s. Among teen-agers, suicide is one of the most common causes of death; in some areas, it is the second most common cause.
What is the best remedy for depression? How can Christians maintain a life of continual victory? These pages will present some key ideas that can lift people out of the gloomy pit and keep them living in the sunshine of God’s love. You may not need help for yourself; yet there are probably people around you who are hurting. With these keys in your hand, you may be able to help them escape from darkness and come into light.
You may notice the absence of any section in this book dealing with the devil. That is not because I do not recognise his power to destroy human life. I understand full well that he comes, as Jesus said, only to steal, kill, and destroy
(Jn 10:10). But despite common opinion, Satan is seldom the immediate cause of depression, and I felt he could be safely left out of these pages (apart from an occasional reference here and there.)
If you want to know more about the devil and demons, you should obtain my book on the subject, Demonology. (1) But here I am content to say only this much: the devil certainly does go around seeking whom he may devour
(1 Pe 5:8-9), so we do need to take him into account. He may not often be the instigator of melancholy, but he and his minions do often try to take advantage of a gloomy state that already exists. Our duty, knowing that Satan can and does attack the saints (Re 13:7), is to resist him steadfastly in faith (Ja 4:7-8), confident of the victory that we have in Christ.
In his essay on the art of poetry Horace once said, It is difficult to express ordinary ideas in a unique manner.
Yet that is what I have tried to achieve in these pages. You will no doubt make your own judgment about whether or not I have succeeded. I certainly hope at least that you will discover here (even if few and far between
) some subtle spells
akin to those described by Henry Kendall (2) in a lovely sonnet. He too had abandoned hope of perfection, and of complete originality. He was content in his latter years (as I am myself) to draw upon universal knowledge, and only occasionally to come delightedly upon scenes of wondrous beauty, which no other eye had before seen –
I proposed once to take my pen and write,
Not songs, like some, tormented and awry
With passion, but a cunning harmony
Of words and music caught from glen and height,
And lucid colours born of woodland light
And shining places where the sea-streams lie.
But this was when the heat of youth glowed white,
And since, I’ve put the faded purpose by.
I have no faultless fruits to offer you
Who read this book; but certain syllables
Herein are borrowed from unfooted dells
And secret hollows dear to noontide dew;
And these at least, though far between and few,
May catch the sense like subtle forest spells.
Chapter One
NATURAL AND PHYSICAL
(Return to Top)
We can be too pious for our own good. We attribute bad days to some mysterious spiritual force, when the cause may be nothing more than a normal swing in the cycle of life. The devil is often blamed for problems his hand never touched!
We need to take account of these natural fluctuations. They reflect the way God has chosen to build a world in which everything moves around changing seasons. Tides rise and fall, winds surge and flow, the moon waxes and wanes, the whole earth is marked by a constant ebb and flow.
Inevitably, we ourselves experience the same shifts in our own daily affairs. Sometimes the tide
is in, and sometimes it is out – but it will come back again. There are no mountains without valleys, and no valleys without mountains; if day is followed by night, just as surely night is followed by day. So the first rule in coping with depression is this –
TAKE ACCOUNT OF NATURAL CYCLES
All professional athletes, performers, entertainers and public speakers experience good days and bad days – that is, times when it seems they can do nothing wrong, and other times when, no matter how hard they try, they can do nothing right! Christians are subject to the same fluctuations, although they often search unwisely for some deeper reason for a bad day.
A preacher, for example, may step out of the pulpit complaining that the devil put a blanket of ineptitude over his entire sermon. In reality, the fault was probably nothing more than a natural ebb in his usual skill. Or, the same man, if he has preached brilliantly, at once claims a special infusion of supernatural grace. More likely, he was just enjoying a good day! To attribute such variations to some profound spiritual cause is probably wrong. Most times the reason will be nothing more than an ordinary turning of the tide of life in one direction or another.
CRICKET PLAYERS AND OTHERS
Sir Donald Bradman is reckoned by some to have been the most gifted athlete of all time. On a chart grading the performance of a cluster of brilliant sportsmen and women, he stands astonishingly far above the next highest. (3) Yet on the only occasion I went to a cricket ground to see Bradman bat in person, he failed. The world’s greatest batsman walked out to the wicket, was clean-bowled by the first ball he faced, and walked back again to the pavilion!
If you prefer a baseball metaphor, we could say that even the very best players strike-out sometimes! Or think about tennis: today a player hits every ball right in the centre of his racquet and places each shot perfectly; but tomorrow he may hardly be able to get near the ball!
Occasionally I am able to attend a symphony concert, and while my hope of a pleasant evening listening to fine music is seldom disappointed, it is sometimes wonderfully exceeded. How? Because occasionally a strange magic happens in a concert hall. By some mysterious process, the maestro, the orchestra, the music, the audience, find themselves caught up in a marvellous harmony. The music rises from the mundane to the heavenly, and a performance that would have been merely competent is suddenly transformed into a supernal experience. If you were sitting there watching me, you would see tears of rapture shining in my eyes. On those nights, my soul is alive with a special joy, worship vibrates in my spirit, and paeons of praise to the Giver of divine music pour out of a grateful heart.
A BAFFLING MYSTERY
Yet here is the strange thing: the same orchestra, playing the same music, to the same audience, a day later may lapse into a merely entertaining performance. What caused the magic in the earlier concert? Why did it vanish? No one knows. It seems weird, but seldom can any player or performer safely predict either success or failure. There is no way to determine whether on a particular day one will behave superbly or abysmally.
Sir Laurence Olivier was reckoned to be the greatest male Shakespearian actor of the 20th century, if not of all time. His dramatic powers were just as extraordinary on the screen as they were in the live theatre, so he was accustomed to receiving constant acclaim. But on one occasion, his performance reached such sensational heights that when he left the stage a thunderous standing ovation shook the building. However, as his fellow actors and the theatre staff later crowded around him, pouring out their congratulations, he was curt and angry. He swore at them, pushed his way through, and rushed distraught into the dressing room. His friends were bewildered. One of them finally approached the actor and asked, Why are you so upset? Don’t you know that your performance was marvellous?
Olivier replied with despair, Of course I know! But I don’t know how or why I was able to do it. So how do I know if I can ever do it again?
IT HAPPENS YO US TOO
We Christians, whether preachers or lay people, need to accept this fact: life runs in cycles; its tides rise and fall. We are not different from our neighbours. We too enjoy those wonderful days when it seems impossible to make a mistake, when everything around us works just as it should. Yet for no discernible reason we also experience those other dismal days, when everything goes wrong, when every effort fails and it feels like the whole world is against us.
Those who are wise recognise that no one can escape these ups and downs in the flow of life. Expecting good fortune to come and go, they will not be too much swayed by either a marvellous performance nor a poor one. They will be like Alfred the Great,