Kenneth Copeland Ministries Teaching the Word of God, All Over the World!

9Dec/09Off

Gloria Copeland — God Is Our Eternal Shepherd

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

1 Chronicles 16:15, 20-22
KJV—Be ye mindful always of his covenant;
the word which he commanded to a thousand
generations.… When they went from nation to
nation, and from one kingdom to another
people; He [the Lord] suffered no man to do
them wrong: yea, he reproved kings for their
sakes, saying, Touch not mine anointed, and
do my prophets no harm.

AMP—Be mindful of His covenant forever, the
promise which He commanded and established
to a thousand generations.… When they went
from nation to nation, and from one kingdom
to another people, He allowed no man to do
them wrong; yes, He reproved kings for their
sakes, saying, Touch not My anointed, and do
My prophets no harm.

Moffatt—Never forget his compact, the
pledge he gave for a thousand generations.…
[They wandered] from one nation to another,
and from realm to realm...he would not let a
man oppress them, he would punish kings on
their account, saying, “Never touch my chosen,
my prophets never harm.”

NIV—He remembers his covenant forever,
the word he commanded, for a thousand
generations.… They wandered from nation to
nation, from one kingdom to another. He
allowed no man to oppress them; for their
sake he rebuked kings: “Do not touch my
anointed ones; do my prophets no harm.”

Psalm 37:28
KJV—The Lord loveth judgment, and forsaketh
not his saints; they are preserved for ever.

AMP—The Lord delights in justice and forsakes
not His saints; they are preserved forever.

Moffatt—The Eternal, who loves honesty,
never forsakes his faithful band.

NIV—The Lord loves the just and will not
forsake his faithful ones. They will be protected
forever.

Psalm 95:7
KJV—He is our God; and we are the people of
his pasture, and the sheep of his hand.

AMP—He is our God and we are the people
of His pasture and the sheep of His hand.

Moffatt—The Eternal is our God, and we the
people whom he shepherds.

NIV—He is our God and we are the people of
his pasture, the flock under his care.

Isaiah 54:17
KJV—No weapon that is formed against thee
shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise
against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn.
This is the heritage of the servants of the
Lord, and their righteousness is of me, saith
the Lord.

AMP—No weapon that is formed against you
shall prosper, and every tongue that shall rise
against you in judgment you shall show to be in
the wrong. This [peace, righteousness, security,
triumph over opposition] is the heritage of the
servants of the Lord [those in whom the ideal
Servant of the Lord is reproduced]; this is the
righteousness or the vindication which they
obtain from Me [this is that which I impart to
them as their justification], says the Lord.

Moffatt—No weapon forged against you shall
succeed, no tongue raised against you shall
win its plea. Such is the lot of the Eternal’s
servants; thus, the Eternal promises, do I
maintain their cause.

TLB—No weapon turned against you shall
succeed, and you will have justice against
every courtroom lie. This is the heritage of the
servants of the Lord. This is the blessing I have
given you, says the Lord.

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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2Jul/09Off

Kenneth Copeland — God is Faithful

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland

One of the first steps to becoming
righteousness-conscious is to learn the
difference between having your sins forgiven,
and having your sins remitted. Remitted is a
word that should never be used in connection
with a believer because a man’s sin is remitted
only once.

When sin is remitted, at the moment of
salvation, the Word tells us we become “a
new creature: old things are passed away;
behold, all things are become new”
(2 Corinthians 5:17).

You see, the problem we had before we
were saved was not all those little individual
sins we committed. They were only the
symptoms. The problem was the condition
of our hearts. The problem was our sin
nature. No matter how hard we tried to be
good and act right, that nature kept us
imprisoned in sin.

But when we made Jesus the Lord of our
lives, our sin nature died and a righteous
nature was born in us. Sin no longer had
dominion over us. Righteousness set us free!

That kind of freedom wasn’t available to
people in Old Testament days. Back then,
before the blood of Jesus had been shed, there
was a “reckoned righteousness” with God,
gained through the blood of sacrificed bulls
and goats. Those sacrifices covered the individual
sins, but they didn’t change the hearts
of people. People kept on committing the
same sins every year because their nature was
still the nature of sin.

“For it is not possible that the blood of bulls
and of goats should take away sins” (Hebrews
10:4). But what the blood of bulls and goats
could not do, Jesus’ blood did. “This man, after
he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat
down on the right hand of God.... For by one
offering he hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified” (verses 12, 14).

How long will Jesus’ sacrifice for sin last?
Forever. You are forever righteous through
the blood of Jesus.

I know you still miss it and sin sometimes.
But even when you do, it’s not the
same because your heart is different. God
doesn’t see you the same way He did before
you were born again.

Think of it this way. If you’re a parent,
you may know your child has done something
wrong, but as far as you’re concerned,
he’s still your child and he’s wonderful. He
may need to be corrected, but there’s nothing
wrong with him. You know he wants to
please you. He just needs more training so
he can learn to do things right.

Do your children fall out of good standing
with you just because they mess up?
Certainly not. It’s the same way in the family
of God. Once you’ve been born again, your
nature is changed. You don’t want to sin even
when you do sin.

And when you do sin, you have Someone
on your side. “...If any man sin, we have an
advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous”
(1 John 2:1). “If we confess our sins,
[God] is faithful and just to forgive us our sins,
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness”
(1 John 1:9).

While remission changes your nature,
forgiveness erases your mistakes. And that’s
the final word on sin. God has taken care of
the sin problem forever. When Jesus became
sin and put sin away, the sin problem became
a closed issue with God.

You can still sin if you choose. God won’t
stop you. The Holy Spirit will deal with you
if you’ll listen...but if you won’t, you can do
what you will. But you don’t have to sin. You
don’t have a sin nature anymore. You have
a righteous nature.

God “hath delivered us from the power of
darkness, and hath translated us into the
kingdom of his dear Son” (Colossians 1:13).
You’ve been translated out of one kingdom
and into another one.

People are so worried about the devil.
They’re fighting the devil and bombarding
the gates of hell all over the place. But I like
what one author wrote: “If you really understand
your righteousness in Christ and your
authority as a believer, you will pay no attention
to the devil. You’ll just go on and do
your job.”

Jesus said, “I beheld Satan as lightning fall
from heaven. Behold, I give unto you power
to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over
all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall
by any means hurt you” (Luke 10:18-19).

Satan has no authority over you unless
you give it to him. Jesus has stripped him of
all authority and placed it in your hands. As
He said in the Great Commission, “All power
is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go
ye therefore...” (Matthew 28:18-19).
That’s good news, Church! Let’s tell it!

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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24Jun/09Off

Good News! By Kenneth Copeland

kenneth-and-gloria-copeland_11

“Go ye therefore and teach all nations
that God is mad at them.”

That’s not what Jesus said in the Great
Commission. But all too often, that is the
message traditional religion has preached.

People (believers and unbelievers alike)
have been told how unworthy they are.
They’ve been told what sorry creatures
they are. They’ve been told they don’t
act right or talk right or pray right.

Sound familiar? If so, I have some good
news for you today: God is not mad at you.
In fact, He’s not mad at anybody!

The Bible says He [God] “was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing
their trespasses unto them” (2 Corinthians 5:19).

Every person ever born on this earth has already
been guaranteed by God, the right to stand
before Him without any sense of guilt or shame.

Every person, no matter how covered in sin he
may be, qualifies to receive God’s righteousness.
Not everyone takes advantage of it, but everyone
has the opportunity.

Statements like that shock religious people.
Do you know why? Because, as Romans 10:3
says, “They being ignorant of God’s righteousness,
and going about to establish their own
righteousness, have not submitted themselves
unto the righteousness of God.”

That’s what religion always does. It tries
to establish its own righteousness, its own
rules, its own right-standing with God.
Religion says, if you act right, talk right,
dress right and look right, then God will
give you favor.

But God isn’t religious. He says, I don’t
want you to establish your own righteousness.
I want to give you Mine. But before you can
receive it, you have to quit trying to establish
your own.

You can’t earn the righteousness of God.
There’s nothing you can do to deserve it. It’s
God’s gift. All you can do is receive it.

When I accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord,
God declared me righteous. I didn’t look very
righteous. I called on liquor stores back then.
Alcohol was my business. I sold it and I
drank it. But the day I submitted to Jesus,
my life changed.

I went back to work the next Monday
morning in those same liquor stores. I didn’t
know a thing about the Bible. I only knew
I was different. Soon, I began to tell people
that I had two kinds of spirits, alcoholic
spirits and the Holy Spirit. “Which one do
you want to hear about first?” I’d ask.

I found that many of them were interested
in Jesus. They weren’t interested in religion,
but they were interested in knowing that God
was no longer “imputing their trespasses” to
them. They were interested in knowing that
He had settled the account of the whole
world’s sins. That was good news!

The sad thing is many believers—people
who have already been made righteous in
Jesus—don’t fully grasp that news. They
don’t realize God isn’t mad at them. They
don’t realize they can go boldly before the
throne of God without shame—dressed in
the righteousness of Jesus Christ.

That’s because they’ve been taught to focus
more on how they’ve messed up than on what
Jesus has done for them. They’re more sin-conscious
than they are righteousness-conscious.

Kenneth Copeland Ministries

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