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You Were Born for This: Seven Keys to a Life of Predictable Miracles [Paperback]

Bruce Wilkinson , David Kopp
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Jan 18 2011

What if you missed a miracle yesterday?

Do you believe that if God still works miracles, He only works them through a select group of people-not you? Then it's time to discover the truth. You were created to help others experience personal miracles on a regular basis. You were born to accomplish God's work by His power.

In You Were Born for This, Bruce Wilkinson explores life-changing questions such as: Why do so few people experience miracles? What does it mean to be sent on a miracle mission? And, how can anyone partner with God to deliver miracles to others?

You will learn how to make a lifestyle of predictable miracles your new normal. Because when people ask God to accomplish the miraculous through them, things change. Relationships. Finances. Families. Spiritual lives. Soon the extraordinary becomes the everyday, and God showing up in supernatural ways is no longer something to wish for-it is the life God intended you to live.

Discover why you were born for this!

 


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About the Author

Bruce Wilkinson, one of the world's best-known Bible teachers is the author of numerous bestsellers, including the New York Times #1 bestseller The Prayer of Jabez, The Dream Giver, and other books. He and his wife, Darlene, live near Atlanta.

David Kopp has collaborated with Bruce Wilkinson on more than a dozen bestsellers, including The Prayer of Jabez. He lives in Colorado.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter 1

A New Way to See the World

You were born to expect a miracle today

What if I told you
I’m certain you missed a miracle yesterday? And not just any miracle but one that Heaven wanted to do through you to significantly change someone’s life for the better–maybe your own?

I would understand if you were doubtful.

But right alongside that doubt, most of us can identify a nearly universal experience. Almost everyone in the world–whatever their religious belief–can point to an event in their lives that seemed directly orchestrated by Heaven, that seemed impossible to explain without using words like “I can’t believe what just happened! That was a miracle!” We call these experiences divine coincidences, miracle moments, supernatural provisions.

Whatever we call them, we tend to value such events so highly that we recount them over and over, often for years. “I’ll never forget the time…,” we say, or “Sooner or later my daughter is going to tell you about…”
Why do we remember such events so clearly? I think it’s because we feel that we have been touched by Heaven. It’s as if God Himself stepped through the curtain that separates the seen from the unseen to make something wonderful happen for us, something only He could do.

But here’s the best part. In the experience we hear a personal and unforgettable message from God. Something like, I’m here. I care about you. I can do for you what you cannot do for yourself. Beginning with this near-universal experience, this book asks a few simple but intriguing questions:

• Why are these experiences of the miraculous so rare for most people?
• What if Heaven actually wanted you to experience them on a regular basis?
• What if ordinary people like you and me are invited to partner with God to deliver miracles to others?

If these questions put a picture in your mind of people everywhere walking around expecting to be a part of miracle moments on a regular basis, you’re not far wrong.

A mysterious encounter
Let me tell you about a mysterious encounter I had in a restaurant outside Denver with a waiter named Jack. I call it mysterious because on the surface everything looked so ordinary. Five friends at a table for six, waiters coming and going, voices, clatter–just what you’d expect in a busy restaurant. But by the time dinner was over, we all knew beyond a doubt that we’d been present for a divine appointment.
It was as if God Himself had walked up and said, “Thank you for saving Me a place. I’ve been wanting to do something for Jack.”

Here’s what happened.

During the course of the meal, Jack had served us well. But apart from the usual exchanges about the menu and our orders, we hadn’t spoken much. Around the table, meanwhile, the conversation revolved around some of Jesus’more extreme teachings–ones like “Ask, and you will receive” and “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” During the conversation I felt unexpectedly nudged by Heaven to try something I’d never done before. At the same time I sensed it was meant to involve Jack.

My experiment involved putting three hundred dollars “at risk.” Now, don’t let the amount throw you. The money wasn’t mine, and believe it or not, the person who was letting me carry it around was expecting me to give it away. (But more about that in a later chapter.)

When Jack came by to refill the water glasses, I posed a question. “Have you ever heard the saying ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive’?”

“Yes, I have,” he said.

“Do you believe that?”

“Sure, I guess I do,” he said, looking puzzled.

“Good!” I said. “I have an interesting opportunity for you.” I placed a hundred-dollar bill on the table. “You have an unusual choice, Jack. You can either receive this hundred dollars as a gift, not a tip…”

I paused. I definitely had Jack’s attention, and the two couples with me
didn’t appear to be breathing.

I looked at Jack. “Or you can say no to the money and instead give each of us a dessert. But this would be you buying the desserts, not the restaurant. You can’t do both things, and there’s no right or wrong. So what would you like to do–give or receive?”

Jack just stood there holding the water pitcher. He asked twice if I was serious. Then finally he said, “I’ll take the hundred dollars.”

True to my word, I handed him the bill.

“Thank you!” he said. Then he walked back to the kitchen.

After he left and my friends started breathing again, we all tried to figure out what had just happened. Was my unusual test about giving and receiving even fair? What was Jack thinking now? And what in the world was he saying to the crew in the kitchen?

All the while I was feeling increasingly uncomfortable. You see, earlier I had slipped another two hundred dollars under my plate. If the waiter had chosen to buy us desserts and not take the hundred–believing that it is more blessed to give than to receive–I was going to give him the hidden two hundred dollars. I had really hoped he would make the self-sacrificial choice because I’d strongly sensed that God wanted to encourage him with the larger sum.

The next time he came around, I said, “I’m curious, Jack. Do you feel like you made the right choice?”
“Absolutely!” he said excitedly. “In fact, it was a miracle. You see, I’m a single dad.” He pulled out his wallet and proudly showed us a photo of his three-year-old son. “Isn’t he something!” he said with a big smile. Then he explained his reaction. “I have to work three jobs during four days of the week just so I can take care of my son the other three days when my ex-wife works. But I’m having a tough time making ends meet. Just this morning I had to mail my alimony check of a hundred dollars even though my account was down to zero. Driving to work this afternoon, I actually prayed, ‘God, please! I need an extra hundred dollars, and I need it tonight!’ ”

Well, I was speechless, and so were my friends. How could we have known of our waiter’s crisis or of his prayer for a hundred dollars?

Then it was my turn to explain. I told him that even if he had decided to give instead of receive, I’d planned to give him the hundred dollars. “But now that I know your story, I agree. You made the right choice.”
Suddenly I knew what needed to happen next. “You have to know that none of this money was mine,” I told him. “The owner wanted me to pass it on as a kind of message to the right person. And I’m sure that person was you.”

I reached under the plate for the other two hundred. “Obviously God wanted you to have the hundred dollars, and He wants you to have this too.”

What God thinks is normal
What just happened here? Let’s break it down:

• Jack drove to work that evening to wait tables, but he brought
with him a secret, pressing need.
• I had come to Colorado from Atlanta on business and ended
up having dinner with friends in Jack’s restaurant.
• Unbeknown to Jack or my friends, I was prepared to meet
someone’s financial need with money that wasn’t mine.
• By the end of the evening, God had used one person to deliver
something that met a big need for another person–and in a
way that was clearly miraculous to everyone involved.

You might react differently to what happened around that table. You might think, for example, Well, I don’t have a hundred-dollar bill lying around. And if I did, why would I give it to a stranger? For that matter, how would I figure out whom to give it to?

We’ll look closely at these reactions and more like them in the pages ahead. You’ll see, I promise, that God is just as likely to have plans for five dollars or twenty dollars as He is for a hundred dollars and that He never asks you or me to serve Him in a way that doesn’t fit us personally and perfectly.

For now, though, put yourself in the story of our dinner with Jack. Imagine how you would have felt leaving that table and knowing you had played an active role in delivering God’s provision for a young man’s desperate need. Better yet, imagine a lifestyle of such encounters, where God works through you in unexplainable ways to do a miracle–and on a regular basis.

This kind of life is not only possible but is what God thinks of as normal when He thinks of you.
You see, He did not place you on this earth to notice Him at work only once or twice in your whole life. He did not create you to consistently miss out on the wonder of His presence and power.

The truth is, you were born to live a supernatural life doing God’s work by God’s power. You were born to walk out your door each morning believing that God will use you to deliver a necessary miracle today.
This book will show you how.

The Everyday Miracle Territory
When it comes to miracles, most people I know see the world as divided
in two.

On the far left is a region we could call the Land of Signs and Wonders. In this land amazing miracles seem to happen a lot, although only for a select few. Mostly this world reveals itself on television, in a few unusual churches, and in faraway places. Still, Signs and Wonders is a remarkable place. In this land the blind regain their sight and invalids throw away their canes to run around like school kids.

On t...

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Challenging yet concerning Sep 14 2009
Format:Hardcover
I was a fan of Bruce Wilkinson's The Prayer of Jabez (POJ) and so I was excited at the chance to do a blog review of his latest book, You were Born for This (Multnomah Books, 2009). Whereas I felt a careful read of POJ showed that Wilkinson was reasonably interpreting the biblical text and not preaching a "prosperity theology," this newest book leaves me concerned and confused that he is not edging but in fact leaping very close to such a warped theology.

The basic premise of the book is that God wants to use every believer as his "delivery agent" to daily bring miracles of all sorts to individuals. All a person has to do is be spiritually alert God's nudges, bumps, cues and prompts and then let God's Holy Spirit do the miracles... whether financial, relational, or salvific.

Wilkinson has laid out a step-by-step method so that even the most hesitant, skeptical, or "untrained" reader will be able to grow in their ability to hear/see the signals that God is ready to do a miracle in a person's life and you can be the delivery agent. Negatively, the book could be seen as a formulaic guide to "making a miracle happen." Positively, it provides a reader friendly and practical guide so that any believer can be God's delivery agent in everyday situations of amazing miracles.

After reading the book, I cannot say that Wilkinson demonstrates poor theology or interpretation. In fact, he's pretty attentive to explaining things carefully (such as "how to make sure God receives the glory for a miracle). His stories are real life examples that are indeed miraculous, and yet not "fanciful" or "spectacular." Yet it is hard not to get the impression that you see "miracles on demand" if you follow the right steps... though again, I'm quite certain Wilkinson would not advocate such a position (and does not in the book).

I would recommend the book as a challenging and thought-provoking read, that pushes a conservative evangelical's thinking.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Becoming an agent for miracles is possible Sep 12 2009
By Canadianladybug TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Welcome to Mission Central, the place where God send whoever he wants and whoever is willing to a special mission. Are you willing to put on your delivery uniform and follow God on it? Are you willing to offer God yourself so He can use you on a daily basis? Are you willing to experience to enter the Land of Everyday Miracle Territory instead of staying in the Land of Signs and Wonders or the Land of Good Deeds? If you are then be prepare to be amazed at what opportunities God will bring to you. Oh and it is guaranteed that He will match you with people or situations unique for your own life. Every agent will experience something different. Isn't it neat?
Every miracle starts with a person in need. It's not our choices. It's not our agenda. It's not who you would pick or which mission you would prefer. God is the one in control and our role is to be there to serve anyone, anytime and anywhere He seems fit for us. The important thing is to serve God and please Him... not the people around us.
Our partner in this mission is the Holy Spirit. He will guide us and help us in time in need. The important thing to remember is not the fear take over us and to step out of our comfort zone. It won't be easy all the time but with time we will become more able to do it. Practice does indeed make it perfect.
Open your eyes and see the need around you. It can be your neighbor, the server at the restaurant, the lady who serves your coffee every morning, your co-worker, your child's teacher, etc. You have to commit yourself to the agency and be aware of your environment. God can bring an opportunity to you at any moment. Are you ready?
The book explains the various key necessary to open the door of possibilities for you to be involved in some miracles on a daily basis. It will also guide you in the steps to take when you are in the middle of a miracle mission. The book also present three special delivery missions: money, dream and forgiveness. During the reading of the book, you will also read about various stories of ordinary people who were there when God brought up a mission on their lap. They didn't hesitate and followed His lead. Some stories brought tears in my eyes while I read them.
I learned a lot while reading this book and I plan to be open to anything God will bring on my path. I know I can help others as it had happened in the past. I, myself, if a child of divorce (it happened when I was in my 20s) and I had the opportunity of helping a woman dealing with the fact her husband had cheated on her while I was at the park with my son a few years ago. I was able to pray for her and her son as well as her marriage. I was able to give her a book from Dr. Dobson that I had just finished reading and annotated from my own experience with my parents. I wonder today how she is doing but she had called to tell me the book was helping her a lot. It was totally unexpected and scary at first but I helped her anyway.
Somehow, as the years went by, I "lost" the possibility of being available. Why? I don't know maybe because I got busier with various things - primarily my own kids. But I see the importance of telling God that we are available to experience the Everyday Miracle Territory. Personally, I want more of these miracles in my life. Where is my uniform God? I want to be a delivery agent for You! How about you dear reader? Are you willing to step out of faith and be there for whoever God brings on your path?
[...].
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  144 reviews
61 of 61 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Much better than expected Sep 15 2009
By Joel Klampert - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I recieved this book in the mail a few weeks ago and I have to admit I read it with preconceived notions or judgments about what I would be reading. The title and little book blurbs caused great concern that what I was to read was The prayer of Jabez meets the Prosperity Gospel with a few words changed. I was completely floored when I got into that it was none of that.

This is a book that teaches you how to be open to God, how to listen for His prompts and or detours, and then most importantly how to act on it. So much of the Christian world these days is all talk and this book teaches you to take notice and the miracles God does and jump in and be a part of them.

I walked away from reading this excited and ready to be used by God.

I encourage everybody to read this book and read it with an open mind to what God has for you in your day to day.
53 of 58 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Refreshing Improvement Over Jabez!! Worth a Look~ Sep 15 2009
By Chautona - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This book is about seeing the miraculous around us and being a part of delivering and receiving those "miracles". I must confess, I have a very difficult time using the word miracle. People often mock me for that-- they assume it's a lack of belief in them or a discomfort with God so directly intervening in our lives. They are wrong. I am uncomfortable with the loose way the word is tossed around. We use miracle these days like we do love. We say we love ice cream, pizza, a good TV show, our friend, our mother, and our Lord. We also facetiously use it to say we love that which we do not. Miracle has become just as equally and liberally sprinkled over our conversation and I'm uncomfortable with it. I keep trying to teach myself not to misuse love and I don't want to get into the habit of saying that the amazing is a miracle.

I define miracle very strictly. To me, a miracle is a supernatural event that runs contrary to nature. So I'm even one of those obnoxious people who is not comfortable talking about the "miracle of birth". I don't see birth as a miracle. It is a carefully designed and orchestrated event that God set into the natural motion of living on this earth. It is marvelous, wondrous, amazing-- but it's not a miracle. Turning water into wine is a miracle. Feeding five thousand with enough food for four or five tops-- that's a miracle. Especially when you consider that there were LEFTOVERS. It isn't a miracle if you meet a need that you didn't know was a need. It's wonderful, God be praised and all glory to Him for leading you in that direction so He could bless someone through you, but it's not a miracle.

So, reading a book with the subtitle : 7 Keys to a Life of Predictable Miracles was kind of difficult to do. Somewhere in the first couple of chapters, I decided to see the words "every day miracles" as one word. It was a little mind game I played on myself, but it really helped me to read the book and give it a "fair shot" so to speak. I kept reading everydaymiracles and voila... it seemed to transform into a completely new word that was easier for me to follow. If you decide to read the book (and there truly is a lot in this book that I think Christians today need to read), if the word miracles used in this context bothers you like it did me, perhaps seeing it as one word or changing it to blessings or something will help you.

One of my biggest objections was the seemingly constant reference to The Prayer of Jabez. Anyone who knows me at all knows that I do not like most trends in Christian circles. If it's "spiritually popular" it usually means I'm not going to like it. I didn't like Left Behind, The Prayer of Jabez, The Purpose Driven Church/Life, and similarly popular things. I joked once that I expanded my territory by removing the book from my house. Instead, I bought The Mantra of Jabez from Canon Press and that now holds the place Mr. Wilkinson's book once did. Because of that, I nearly rejected the opportunity to read this book. I was afraid I wouldn't like it. But as I've said before, I LOVE being proven wrong, love being stretched and this book was an opportunity to do that. I'm very glad I did.

Mr. Wilkinson says something in the first few chapters that was a lovely breeze of fresh air over me. I loved it. He gave a picture of heaven (I won't spoil it for you) and my first thought was, "Finally someone sees heaven a bit more like I do." I'll admit, that one thing, combined with really inspiring stories about real people doing real things to make a difference in the lives of others, was worth reading even if nothing else he said was applicable to my life. (And yes, there were things I needed to take to heart, take to the Word, and ask the Lord where He wanted me to make changes-- the book is very encouraging that way.)

I would say my biggest objection in this book was a story he told about the death of a child. Without giving away the details, he quite plainly states that because someone didn't follow God's nudge, this child died and the implication (or was it more overt-- I can't remember) was that the child's death was the worst thing to happen to the child. I had several problems with his conclusion and one being that we do not know the mind of God. We don't know if this child was a Christian and was going home to be with Jesus or if he was lost forever. We don't know so much and to make the statement that he died as a direct result of some unknown (and possibly non-existent) nudge bothers me. I think it's wrong.

At the risk of being accused of quibbling, I also took issue with his assessment of his own story. He told about trying to do work and being interrupted until finally he decided to lay it aside and embrace the interruption and the result was heart wrenching and heart warming at the same time. He saw his determination to do "his own thing" as something wrong, but as I read the story, I saw it Divinely orchestrated. Had he not kept working when he did, the interest that the interruption developed in him and his work would potentially (actually almost certainly I would think) have never happened. What he saw as resistance to the Lord's 'nudge' seems to me more like the Lord holding him back from following it until the best moment. Quibble? Yes. But I do think it shows how easily we assume we're so pivotal in the Lord's work rather than the Lord's work through us as being what is so pivotal.

One of my favorite points in his 5 point list of things to do to "experience an everydaymiracle" was the last. Number 5. "Transfer the credit." I get very frustrated with formulas to follow for "success" in Christianity, life, or anything else for that matter. We're people-- humans. We're diverse, unique, and formulas while great in the kitchen and the laboratory do not work so well in people. I know why he wrote it with his little bulleted lists and numbered steps. Modern people, particularly Americans, like their "steps to" success. We want a brief to-do list with everything carefully outlined and summarized for us. It's who we are as a culture and I understand that. I think, to a certain degree, he had to write the book that way, and I don't fault him for it. However, that last "step"... transfer the credit, it spoke to me because it is the one thing you rarely see in these kinds of lists. It was like a reminder-- stating the obvious, yes, but a reminder. It took the sterility out of the formula. I loved it.

A buzzword he coined "God Pocket" blessed my socks off. I have a tendency to be what is kindest to call "thoughtlessly generous"-- generous without giving thought to if it is how the Lord would want me to give. I'm a need meeter. If I see a need, I have the funds/ability, I try to meet it. I love to try to help meet needs. However, just because there is a need, and just because I can meet it, doesn't mean that I am the best one for it and it's hard to know when/where/how. His idea of the "God Pocket" really encouraged me to become deliberate in preparing to meet needs rather than reacting to the needs in front of me. I think it is what I'll take from the book and use/value the longest.

So, as I finished the book, I really examined my heart. Was I willing to ask the Lord to let me be a part of the everydaymiracle that Mr. Wilkinson encouraged? Did I want that? Was I willing to risk the kind of vulnerability that it requires? Did I think it was what the Lord wanted of me? I really prayed about it because I've known people who lived lives very much like the author describes and they are wonderful lives. However, after much prayer and wrestling with desire over expectation, I truly thought that instead of praying for something to come my way, I'd ask the Lord to prepare me if He chose to bring something my way. Then the words of Isaiah came back to me and I realized that I did want to be sent-- even if just once. So I prayed again and I have asked the Lord for just one moment-- one everydaymiracle to remind me of how God works in the lives of people, through His people, and as He is glorified, we are blessed.

If you want to be encouraged and see what the Lord is doing around us, read the book. If you need to see how the Lord might want to use you in your every day life, read the book. If you want simple ideas for how to see life through a new perspective, read the book. It isn't theologically flawless. I took issue with several things. However, with its faults, this book had a focus that I can sink my teeth into-- doing all to the glory of God, stepping outside our comfort zones to serve others, and seeing opportunities where once we'd have seen nothing.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Every Day Miracles Sep 15 2009
By LadyD - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I love this book because it is one that you will not want to put down. A book filled with hope and inspiration, refection and personal challenge. I have read all of Bruce's books and can easily say he is a great teacher of Christian principles.

What I learned the most from his book is how to be a unique, personal conduit for good in helping another fellow man. I have received many miracles in my lifetime and have witnessed others being blessed by someone's generosity towards them. But to experience being a part of a divine appointment for someone else and seeing them reap a blessing by bestowing seeds of kindness, meeting physical and emotional needs, plus uplifting and encouraging another person is truly a wonderful feeling of fulfillment and purpose as to why we're here and what's life all about really.

I could relate to the everyday miracles shared in Bruce's writings. This book will inspire you as you read about real stories of how just one person can make a difference in someone's life. What grabbed my heart was the simple outline and guidance on "how to" go about meeting another person's need. What makes this particular book a winner is the dynamic duo force of universal identity (I have a great need) and the application (God's work through you).
1 need + your part = a miracle... 5+ stars! I highly recommend this book to you!

Galations 5:25 "Since we are living by the Spirit, let us follow the spirits leading in every part of our lives." In the book, You Were Born For This, you'll learn to recognize God's gentle nudges to be a blessing to others!
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