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Influence: The Spiritual Principle of Transformation

TwoTen received wisdom from Os Hillman, Founder and President of Marketplace Leaders Ministries, regarding a believers' influence in the world through solving problems. We have included some of the article below...

 


 

There is an amazing spiritual principle we find in the Bible – transformed people transform people. Yes, when a heart is changed by an encounter with Jesus Christ, that life becomes a transformer of others. But how did this happen in the Bible? It happened because of what Jesus did with almost every encounter with someone in the scriptures - he solved a problem.

Solving a problem gives a believer influence

 

If you were to read the Gospels about the encounters Jesus had with people, you will find that Jesus did something in almost every case. He solved a problem. When the Roman Centurion met Jesus, he had a need for healing of a family member. What did Jesus do? He healed that family member when he saw the faith of the centurion soldier. When Peter had a need to pay his taxes Jesus told him to go catch a fish to find the coin needed to pay his taxes (wish I could do that for April 15). When the disciples were not catching fish, Jesus said to cast their net on the other side of the boat. When Jesus met the Samaritan woman at the well, who was obviously not of the political party of the disciples, He told her things about her life that caused her to believe in him. The entire city came out to hear him as a result.

 

Culture does not care who solves their problem, they just want their problem solved. If you happen to be a Christian, then Christ is glorified in that problem solving. And you gain influence in that life or that environment. If we are going to catch the world’s attention, we must manifest God’s presence in the area of our calling. We must move beyond words to tangible expressions of solving problems in the culture.

 

George Washington Carver Solved a Problem

 

George Washington Carver grew up at the close of the Civil War in a one-room shanty on the home of Moses Carver - the man who owned his mother. The Ku Klux Klan had abducted him and his mother, selling her to new owners. He was later found and returned to his owner, but his mother was never seen again. Carver grew up at the height of racial discrimination, yet he had overcome all these obstacles to become one of the most influential men in the history of the United States.

 

Carver was a great example of someone who solved a problem that existed in his day. He told the farmers of his day that they needed to stop planting cotton because the land could no longer support the crop. He recommended that they plant peanuts and sweet potatoes instead of cotton, but this led to his greatest trial. The farmers lost even more money due to the lack of market for peanuts and sweet potatoes and blamed Carver.

 

Carver cried out to the Lord, “Mr. Creator, why did you make the peanut?” Many years later, he shared that God led him back to his lab and worked with him to discover some 300 marketable products from the peanut and 100 from the sweet potato. These new products created a demand for peanuts and sweet potatoes, and they were major contributors to rejuvenating the Southern economy.

 



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