A Word With You
#5533 - How to Start a Fire
1 Kings 18: 32
 
 
One sure way to get our whole family together in one room at one time was 
to turn down the heat a little on a cold night and then build a fire in 
the fireplace. Slowly but surely, the kids' rooms upstairs would empty out 
as they made their way downstairs and said, "Man, it's cold up there! Hey, 
you've got a fire in here!" We all loved those fires. Building a good one 
involved several key steps, of course. First, you roll some newspapers 
into logs and put them into the fireplace. Then those little sticks that 
burn easily; they're the kindling, of course. Then the logs stacked 
alternately on the kindling, leaving plenty of room, of course, for air to 
circulate around the wood. It looked nice, but it wasn't a fire. There was 
a missing ingredient. It took that match to make it a fire. But a match 
all alone did not a fire make. 
 
Before the match lit up the fireplace, I always had to do all the things 
needed to get the fire ready. That's what it takes for a spiritual fire to 
start, too. The kind of fire that may be what your church, your ministry, 
or your life desperately needs right now. 
 
We can learn a lot about our part in bringing down fire from God in our 
word for today from the Word of God. It's in 1 Kings 18, beginning with 
verse 32. God's prophet Elijah has challenged 450 leaders of Baal worship 
to a spiritual duel on Mt. Carmel. Whose God could answer from heaven and 
consume by fire a sacrifice on the altar? That true God would be the one 
Israel would worship. 
 
In spite of every spiritual contortion the Baal Gang could go through, 
their sacrifice sat untouched on the altar. The Bible says Elijah took the 
following steps: "He built an altar in the name of the Lord. He arranged 
the wood, cut the bull into pieces and laid it on the wood. At the time of 
sacrifice, the prophet Elijah stepped forward and prayed. Then the fire of 
the Lord fell and burned up the sacrifice. When all the people saw this, 
they fell prostrate and cried, 'The Lord - he is God! The Lord - he is 
God!'" Elijah got things ready for a fire that only God could send; 
trusting God to do what only He could do. 
 
That is so often God's modus operandi in sending us the miracle that is 
our only hope. Abraham has to move from his home in order to found a new 
people in a new land. Noah has to build a boat before there's any need for 
that boat. Moses has to take the step of faith by choosing to go with a 
nation of slaves instead of staying with a nation of masters in order to 
see the miracles of the Exodus. You get things ready by steps of faith and 
obedience that God calls you to do. Then He sends the fire. Our approach 
is like this: "Do something, God, and I'll get moving." God's approach: 
"No. You start moving, and I'll do something." 
 
Billy Graham has often told the story of a visit to Yosemite National Park 
where visitors gathered in the valley beneath Inspiration Point, and this 
fire blazed at the top of the mountain. The U.S. Park Service put on this 
amazing demonstration years ago. The voice boomed across the valley, "Let 
the fire fall!" And it did! A ball of fire cascading down the mountain in 
this blazing Niagara! 
 
Often in recent days, I have prayed, "Lord, let the fire fall" on our 
ministry, on those I love, on spiritually important meetings or 
conversations. I want the fire of heaven to come down and do the 
life-giving, amazing things that only God can do. But He's got something 
He's wanting me to do, and you, to get ready for the fire.
 
Copyright (c) 2008 by Ron Hutchcraft.

 

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