Faith It - Ben Tankard

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Ben Tankard Ben Tankard is a 6’6” big guy, I look like HIM on the inside…..Joel Osteen

Transcript of Faith It - Ben Tankard

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Ben TankardBen Tankard is a 6’6” big guy,

I look like HIM on the inside…..Joel Osteen

Sometimes life is a series of tests. Sometimes life can be a mess. Still, if you learn how to focus your faith, you can turn the tests into testimonies and the mess into a message. Th at is what Ben Tankard

has done and will demonstrate in this book. Faith It ‘Til You Make It is an easy-to-read series of faith nuggets from an NBA hopeful who lost his career through injury but rebounded to discover a hidden music talent that has made him a bestselling gospel/jazz musician.

Th rough faith, you too can discover your inner powers. Th is gift can be triggered by the Word of God as you are inspired by your new faith mentor, Ben Tankard.

Ben Tankard is a former professional basketball player, an American gospel/jazz keyboardist, a producer, a songwriter, and an author. Ben dropped out of college after one year to play minor league professional basketball in Canada. He was invited to an NBA camp but was injured and cut. Ben rebounded from his basketball injury to become a bestselling gospel and jazz musician. He is also a motivational speaker for the

NBA, suit designer (big and tall), pastor, record label president, aircraft pilot/owner, and reality television actor with his own new show on Bravo TV—Th icker Th an Water: Th e Tankards. Ben’s success is based on principles of faith and wisdom, which he shares in his bestselling books and articles and through public appearances. Ben and his wife, Jewel live near Nashville, Tennessee, with their children.

INSPIRATION

A D I V I S I O N O F T H O M A S N E L S O N

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What Others Have Said About Ben Tankard

I have enjoyed Ben’s music and ministry over the last decade. This new book has my endorsement!

—A. C. Green, Former NBA Player, Motivational Speaker, Business Owner

Ben Tankard is a big guy . . . I look like him on the inside . . .—Joel Osteen, Lakewood Church,

Champions Pastor Network

Ben Tankard has struck a chord the body of Christ needs to hear as he speaks to us about the significant role faith plays in helping attain our God-given goals without compromising the deeper treasure of inner harmony with God.

—Bishop T. D. Jakes, The Potter’s House, Inc.

Ben Tankard, is gifted and talented and has dedicated his gifts to the Lord!

—Dr. Frederick K. C. Price, Crenshaw Christian Center

Ben Tankard is one of the most talented young men in ministry today. Taffi [my wife] and I could not be more proud of what he has accomplished. Keep up the good work, Ben!

—Dr. Cref lo Dollar, World Changers Ministries International

Everyone should read this book and hear this great message. Great work!—Dr. Myles Munroe,

Bahamas Faith Ministries International

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Faith It ’Til You Make It

Make Your Future Hear Your Voice

Ben Ta nk a r d

A D I V I S I O N O F T H O M A S N E L S O N

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Copyright © 2013 Ben Tankard.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher

except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Holy Bible.

WestBow Press books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:

WestBow PressA Division of Thomas Nelson

1663 Liberty DriveBloomington, IN 47403www.westbowpress.com

1-(866) 928-1240

Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

Ben-Jamin’ Universal 1510 Memorial Blvd

Murfreesboro,TN 37129www.bentankard.org

615-907-0185

ISBN: 978-1-4908-0709-6 (e)

Printed in the United States of America.

WestBow Press rev. date: 09/12/2013

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Welcome From Test to Testimony

(Article on Ben Tankard from Victory Magazine, Kenneth Copeland Ministries. Reprinted by permission.)

The evening sun was barely visible in the quiet December sky as Ben Tankard maneuvered his International RXT truck around the circular driveway to his home. He and his wife, Jewel, and their children had recently moved into the beautiful three-f loor, 14,000-square-foot mansion in the Nashville, Tennessee suburb of Murfreesboro. The colorful lights illuminating the street set the tone for the season, and for how Ben felt every year as Christmas drew near. But the song softly playing on his truck stereo made the season more real than Ben sometimes cared to remember.

Wiping a tear from his cheek, Ben stepped from the truck, now unable to erase the memory of the drumbeats from the song “The Little Drummer Boy.” Neither could he ignore the thoughts of how significant that song had been in his life. From the age of three, Ben had loved the sound of drums.

“I can remember wishing for a drum every Christmas,” Ben recalls. “But somehow, even that young, I knew it would never happen. We were very poor! Our clothes came from Goodwill, and our Christmas presents often came from the Salvation Army.”

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Poor Little Drummer Boy

When he was seven, Ben tried out for the school Christmas production of The Little Drummer Boy. Unlike others auditioning for the part of the drummer, Ben didn’t own a snare drum. Rather than embarrass him by pointing out that the audition required him to have a drum, the music teacher had asked one of the other boys to loan Ben his drum.

“Halfway through my audition the teacher stopped me and announced, ‘This young man is who we are looking for,’” Ben remembers. When the pageant concluded, Ben received three standing ovations. The teacher surprised Ben by giving him the drum he had used in the play. She also told him how proud she was of his performance, and that his mother had dressed him so perfectly for the part.

“She had no idea I was not dressed ragged on purpose,” Ben said. “She never knew the clothes I wore that night—an old tattered shirt and some cutoff blue jeans—were the best clothes I had.”

“Every time I hear that song I get emotional,” Ben says unashamedly. “It humbles me because I know where I came from and I know who is responsible for me being where I am today.”

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Starting From Nowhere

Where Ben Tankard is today is a good place. Acknowledged by many as “the Quincy Jones of gospel,” Ben is one of Christian music’s best-selling instrumentalists. Twenty-one gold and platinum albums line the walls of his twenty-three-room mansion—the result of songs he wrote and produced and his association with other artists in the industry. He has also received more than fifty Grammy, Dove, and Stellar Awards and nominations over the past twenty years, yet these tell only part of the story of how God has brought him through rough and tragic times. The vacation home in Florida; a f leet of vehicles that includes a limousine, a Mercedes, and two motorcycles; two private airplanes which Ben pilots himself; and an unshakable marriage that is founded on God’s Word are a testimony, Ben says, to what God will do when you truly trust Him.

“It’s not because of anything I’ve done—it’s all about God’s mercy. Had it not been for Him I would be exactly where I started—nowhere.” Describing life growing up in Daytona Beach, Fla., as “nowhere” is about as accurate as it gets for Ben and his family. Ben’s father, Arthur, a Pentecostal preacher, worked hard to provide for his wife, Mary, and their two daughters and son. But times were hard. Like many in those days, the Tankards received their share of government rations, including food stamps, powdered eggs and milk, peanut butter, and cheese. When his job as a migrant worker didn’t bring in enough money to support the family, Arthur collected and sold aluminum cans.

“He would leave home around 4:00 a.m. and spend all day looking for cans, and return with his station wagon loaded with smelly beer cans,” Ben remembers. “Sometimes we had cans in the backyard piled seven feet high.

“I’m sure we weren’t the only poor people back then, but when it’s you, I guess you tend to only see yourself,” Ben said, recalling how a decent meal meant getting chicken backs and wing tips, and turkey parts from the meat market for ten cents a pound. “We got excited just knowing there was meat on those chicken backs.”

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The Reality of Poverty

Poverty was a way of life for the Tankards, but so was church. “We were in church almost every day, and our parents were very strict regarding our lifestyle,” Ben recalls. “My sisters were not allowed to wear pants, we never went to the movies, and we could only watch TV two hours a day.

“I remember thinking, What a way to grow up!” Ben said. “It’s not that I was critical of my parents, because they took real good care of us. I just didn’t understand why it was so hard to have enough food or a decent place to live. The Bible says faith comes by hearing, but the church we were in didn’t teach about prosperity. We didn’t know how to exercise faith for what we wanted, or that we could have faith to believe past where we were so we never prospered.”

“The only time I remember my family ever setting a goal was once when we wanted a double-wide trailer. But that had nothing to do with faith; we just wanted a double-wide!”

They never got the double-wide, but things did start to look up. In 1975, Ben’s dad came home after being away doing migrant work and announced he had found a steady job and a new place to live. The news signaled a fresh start for the Tankards, or so they thought. Their new home in Starke, Fla., turned out to be a small apartment in back of an old, abandoned movie theater. There was running water and a shower, but the only bathroom was at the front of the theater. In Starke, Ben developed a stronger interest in music and quickly excelled. He was the only seventh grader to play with the high-school concert band. In high school he played with the nearby university’s symphony orchestra. Later his family moved to Chattahoochee, where Ben’s life began to take shape when his large, six-foot, six-inch frame caught the attention of the high-school basketball coach. As a result of his impressive performance on the basketball court, and his musical talent, Ben had more than fifty college scholarship offers when it came time to graduate. To stay close to home, he chose to attend Wallace Community College in nearby Dothan, Ala.

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The Wrong Plan

Clearly, God had a plan for Ben Tankard. But by now, Ben had become so absorbed with his own plan for success he never considered looking to God.

“I suppose it goes back to never being taught,” Ben says. “I never knew God loved me enough to do anything for me. My plan was to finish college, then play professional basketball overseas or try for a spot in the NBA.” In 1984, while playing with a minor league basketball team in Canada, Ben was invited to a basketball camp where, he was told, NBA scouts would be present.

“The scouts did see me play and were interested in me,” Ben said. “But I blew out my knee in the first workout and just like that it was over. There went my chance of being in the NBA.” Considering himself a failure, Ben returned to Dothan, Ala.

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A Real Turning Point

Desperate people do desperate things. At twenty-one, Ben Tankard had become desperate. “I had done everything I knew to make it, but nothing worked,” Ben said. “Even worse, I had turned my back on church and God. Now I was in a fix and didn’t know what to do.” Alone in his mobile home, Ben picked up a brochure someone had given him announcing a local church revival. What harm could it do to go? he thought. That night at the revival, a broken Ben Tankard walked down the center aisle to the front of the room to ask Jesus into his life.

“I had spent most of my life in church,” Ben said, “but I cannot honestly remember ever taking a step toward salvation. I guess because we were in church every day, I assumed I didn’t have anything to give up. But that night at the service, I gave it all up . . . I received Jesus Christ as Lord of my life.” As Ben headed back to his seat the minister said, “God has something else for you.” He anointed Ben with oil, and then told him to sit down and play the organ.

“I had never played keyboards before, but that night, under the power of the Holy Spirit, I began to play like a seasoned professional,” Ben said. “Sounds were coming from that organ that neither I nor anyone else in that room had ever heard before—beautiful, jazzy, anointed sounds. Somehow, I knew they were from God, and I knew I had been anointed with a special gift.”

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The Sounds of a Minstrel

Over the next few years, Ben endured more challenges. His father’s health had begun to fail, prompting Ben to move back to Florida to be closer to his family. With no career plans, Ben worked several odd jobs to help out, while a marriage, which had produced three children, ended in divorce. One day during his lunch break, Ben stopped at a music shop and was tinkering with a keyboard when a customer asked if he could play country music. When Ben started playing, the woman turned to the salesclerk and said, “I’ll take the one he’s playing,” Ben remembers. A similar thing happened the next day after a customer heard Ben playing classical music. When Ben’s talent became obvious, the store manager gave him a job.

“I still had a great love for music, and I saw this as my opportunity to finally do what I really wanted,” Ben said. “Only this time I didn’t go out on my own. I knew for me to succeed I had to allow God to show me how to make it happen.”

By 1989, Ben had started his first music company, and within a year had produced his first album, All Keyed Up. Though he considered it a good first effort, the music industry rejected it.

“The negative responses poured in like rain,” Ben remembers. “Secular companies said the music was too gospel, while gospel companies labeled it too jazzy.”

Undaunted, Ben continued to push his new “gospel jazz” sound. “I knew if this was something God had truly called me to, if He really intended for me to be successful as a musician, it would not come without some kind of difficulty or hardship,” Ben said. The years that followed brought their share of hardships, including the death of both Ben’s parents and a second failed marriage.

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A Spiritual Pied Piper

In 1997, Ben visited the Holy Land. “Standing in the place where Jesus stood, and looking at the tomb where He was laid, something happened to me,” Ben ref lects. “I began to see Jesus on a more personal level. Connecting the dots in my life, I could see how He had literally taken me from one point to another. I wanted to know Him even more!” That year, Ben enrolled in a correspondence course through Rhema Bible Training Center.

“One of the books on my required reading list was Prosperity: The Choice Is Yours by Kenneth Copeland,” Ben remembers. “In it Brother Copeland talked about receiving to please the Father . . . When I read that, I understood— God has already provided for us, and it pleases Him when we receive.” Two years later, Ben was attending a conference when Pastor Cref lo Dollar told him: “As you yield to God, you will be raised up as a spiritual Pied Piper like David, to usher people into God’s presence. You will be not only a musician, but a minister to carry the Word of the Lord and lead people into their destiny.”

Around the same time, the Lord revealed something to Ben as he was reading Galatians 6:7, “God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.”

“I needed money to finance my music,” Ben said. “I understood that God had already made the provision. Now it was up to me to put my faith into action by doing something to receive what God had already given me. “I realized it was not just about the amount of money—it was about frequency. If I needed money every day, then I needed to give money every day.” Over the next year, Ben put into practice what the Lord had shown him. “I loved Brother Copeland’s teaching, and had already become a partner with his ministry,” Ben said. “So every day I put an offering in the mail to Kenneth Copeland Ministries or another ministry. Before long I began to see major increase in my family.”

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By 1999, Ben’s music career was in full swing with a number of hit songs to his credit, including “Git Yo Prayze On,” “Sunday Driving,” and “Keynote Speaker.” Invitations for concert appearances were pouring in, and several of his recordings had received nominations for Stellar, Dove, and Grammy Awards. In 2000, Ben met Jewel LaGreen, herself a divorcee and the mother of one daughter.

“From the time I laid eyes on her, I knew she was God’s perfect will for my wife,” Ben says. “An anointed woman of God, she is everything I know God intended for a man to have and I cherish her deeply.” A year later, Ben and Jewel were married, and in 2002 they started the Destiny Center church in Murfreesboro.

“Our lives have not been without challenges,” says Jewel, who is still learning to balance her career as a businesswoman and fashion model with being a mother, homemaker, and pastor’s wife. “Everything we’re walking in is the result of prayer, and that’s what we want for others—to realize that for every prize there is a process, and it begins with the sacrifice of giving your life to the Lord.”

Looking back, Ben Tankard has learned a lot about sacrificial living. “The truth is, I never really lost out on anything,” he says. “It took me going through a lot of hard times in order to pass the test. I needed to wake up and realize God loves me, and that He anointed me for a purpose. Nothing was taken away from me, it was just delayed.”

Nothing was taken away, including Ben’s desire to be involved in the NBA. In 2007, Ben received a call from a young man he had met ten years earlier who was working his way through college. He had become a director of player development with the NBA.

“He wanted me to help them develop some music-based motivational programs they could use to train, encourage, and develop young players in areas outside of basketball,” Ben said. He still works in that capacity today as a motivational speaker.

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“God knew what my involvement with the NBA was to be from the very beginning,” Ben says. “I didn’t have to be on the court to be a testimony of His goodness. Just trusting Him and utilizing what He had anointed me with was enough.”

Some people call them trials and tribulations. But as he looks over the circumstances of his life and all he faced growing up, Ben Tankard sees them as a series of tests.

“They were all tests that God helped me pass,” Ben says. “And because I passed, today I have a tremendous testimony that gives all the glory to Him.”

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Introduction

Faith without works is dead! Do Something Now!

Have you ever felt as though these things were true in your life?

None of my prayers every come to pass.

It seems as though everyone and everything is against me.

I feel like there is a curse on my life.

If I did not have any bad luck, I would not have any luck at all.

Nothing seems to be “working” for me.

Have you ever had these thoughts or spoken these words? If you have, then this is the book for you!

As a believer, it is likely that you have heard teaching on the subject of faith many times. You may even be thinking, “I know all about faith.” Well, let me stop you right there! The truth is that you will never know everything there is to know about faith. Why? Because faith cometh by hearing. That is because we never stop hearing. I’ve heard it said that repetition is the mother of better learning. In other words, the more we hear about a thing, the more we learn about that thing. Faith isn’t something we learn or attain overnight. It’s a gradual process of learning. And, according to Romans 10:17, it begins with the Word of God.

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But even if you “know” the Bible, it does not guarantee you positive results! It is not just what you know that makes you successful, but what you do. Memorize this phrase: “Works will work without faith, but faith will not work without works.” In other words, faith is a two-sided coin. The front side of the faith coin is the “belief” side. This is where you have a high level of confidence in what you believe in as truth. The back side of the faith coin is the “action” side. This is where you actually act on what you believe as truth and do something on a daily basis until something happens. Most people are highly developed on the belief side and underdeveloped on the action side.

I go to the gym at 6:00 a.m. three times a week to play full-court basketball with some other thirty-five-year-old and older guys. Our goal is to look thirty-five until we’re one hundred, so we run very hard to stay in shape. I have been doing this for at least ten years. Almost every time I leave the gym, though, I see a large man sitting in the lobby watching TV and drinking something from a large cup. He usually is waiting for the swimming aerobics class to start. From time to time I stop and chat with him. Over the last few years I have lost forty pounds from working out. But in the same time I have seen him gain weight. I finally asked him one day what was in the cup he was drinking from. He said, coffee with lots of sugar. I told him if he changed that to water, then he would probably see some weight loss and actually benefit from his membership.

In other words, this man was highly developed in his belief that going to the gym would keep him healthy. However, sitting in the gym lobby drinking sugar was working against him! He needed to be highly developed in working out instead.

In the same gym, I often see a man who has big arm and chest muscles but very, very skinny legs (he looks like a cartoon). He will go up to the weight room and immediately begin to work on his arms and chest area . . . again. Because he never works on his legs, one area of his body is highly developed and the other area is underdeveloped. This is a lot like most people’s faith.

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In this book, my plan is to assist you in developing both sides of your faith coin. I am a living witness that faith will totally change your life. Over the last twenty years I have grown from sad to happy, divorced to married, unknown to famous, poor to rich, noneffective to effective, and low impact to high impact through developing the action side of my faith coin. This book will detail the simple methods I have used to change my life from one of poverty and defeat to one of complete fullness.

I am so glad you have allowed me to mentor you in this area. Let’s get started.

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Ch a p t er 1

FAITH: Finding Answers

in the Heavens

For me, the word faith has two meanings: “Finding Answers in the Heavens” and “Forsaking All in Trusting Him.”

Why is faith so important to our Christian walk? Part of that answer is found in Hosea 4:6, which says, “My people are destroyed for the lack of knowledge.”

Notice that it did not say that people are destroyed for the lack of commitment, a lack of good works, or a lack of speaking in tongues. No, it says God’s people are destroyed for the “lack of knowledge.”

Knowledge of what? Knowledge of God’s Word and what it says.

Did you know that the most important thing for a believer, once he or she accepts Jesus Christ as Savior, is to learn to walk by faith? The will of God is not automatic in our lives. Not only must we study the Word of God and learn about the inheritance, promises, and blessings we are entitled to, but we should be aware of the curses, such as poverty, sickness, and spiritual death, so we will know what to avoid and what not to accept into our lives as “God’s will.”

For something to truly become a part of us, it hast to become embedded in our spirits and be the major force of our thought lives. We have to constantly renew ourselves by feeding on the Word of God.

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That’s what hearing is about. In Romans 12:2, Paul tells us, “Be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.”

How is the mind renewed? By hearing something over and over. Even the world knows that repetition brings results. Have you ever noticed, for instance, how easily you can pick up on a song just by hearing it repeatedly on the radio? You’re driving along and all of a sudden you’re singing along to some silly song or jingle that’s playing.

How did you learn those words? Surely you didn’t just sit down and practice until you had them memorized. No. Some way, somehow, that song was introduced into your thinking over a period of time. And subconsciously, you picked up on those words that then became a part of your spirit.

Well, the same principle applies where faith is concerned. You hear the Word of God, you hear the Word of God, and you hear the Word of God. Then, all of a sudden, faith in what you have heard begins to grow inside you. The Word of God becomes just as real as that silly song you were singing.

This spiritual law will work regardless of how you apply it. If you feed on natural things, you will think natural, carnal thoughts and do natural, carnal deeds. But if you feed your spirit on the things of God—Hi Word—you will do those things that are in line with His Word. All things produce after their own kind. A farmer wouldn’t plant corn and expect a full crop of beans several weeks down the road. Likewise, a landscape contractor is not going to put out several dozen pounds of grass seed and come back in a few days expecting to see wheat springing up.

In the same manner, you should not expect faith to pop up if you have not planted the proper seed. You won’t get a harvest of faith if you are planting only soap operas and game shows. When trouble comes and you need to exercise faith, all you’ll find coming up out of your

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spirit is a repeat of what happened on one of those carnal television programs.

We know a minister who is very anointed and full of the Word. He did a great job of ministering the Word to his family and leading them in prayer. However, when he was away at work or on business trips, his wife would spend all her time reading tabloids, on the phone, watching secular music video shows, and surfing the Internet.

What do you suppose eventually happened to her spiritually? It was not too long before she began acting out some of the storylines she had seen in those soap operas. Because of the sinful ingredients she had fed her spirit, it wasn’t long before she attached herself to the wrong crowd and fell headlong into an extramarital affair. Soon she was separated and then divorced. Her family was ripped apart.

Listen, my friends: your eyes and your ears are the gates to your heart. The heart is where faith grows. It is your responsibility to guard the gate! We are the products of our environments. There is no nutritional spiritual value in the things of this world. Just as we need to have a balanced diet to keep our bodies in shape, we need to have a balanced diet of the Word. That’s where faith begins.

As Christians, everything we seek to accomplish has to be done by faith. Everything! Faith is the common thread that connects all the aspects of our spiritual walk with God. Without faith, the Scripture says, it is impossible to please God. The more that you hear the Word of God, the more your trust and confidence in God grow. Faith comes alive in you!

Jesus said, if any man has ears to hear, let him hear. “And He said to them, Take heed what you hear: with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you: and unto you that hear shall more be given” (Mark 4:24).

The Amplified Bible makes it even clearer. “And he said unto them be careful what you are hearing. The measure of thought and study you

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give the truth you hear will be the measure of virtue and knowledge that comes back to you, and more besides will be given to you who hear.”

Can you see that? Feeding your faith on the Word requires discipline. But in the end, that discipline—that time you spend hearing—will pay off. Many Christians have problems exercising faith because they are undisciplined. They don’t want to take the time to do the Word and to hear the Word, both of which are necessary to develop their faith. Their fellowship with God is hit and miss. Most would rather be doing something more fun—or more self-serving.

Just think of the amount of time you spend on yourself—on the f lesh—buying clothes and choosing makeup and hairstyles. On all the things Jesus said would profit nothing.

Then consider how much time you actually spend in the Word of God. How much time do you spend praying? How much time do you devote to communing with God? Is there a balance? Probably not. Therefore, there will also be no faith when you need it. Why? Because you have not spent the proper time in the Word to build yourself up. You have exchanged time with heavenly things for those things of the world—those things that profit you nothing.

John 6:63 says, “It is the Spirit who gives life; the f lesh profits nothing. The Words that I speak to you are Spirit, and they are Life.”

If you expect faith to come alive in you, then you must do what is necessary to have faith. Reportedly, it takes at least twenty-one days of doing something continuously for it to become a habit. What a profitable habit to meditate on the Word of God!

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Ch a p t er 2

Faith Is Now!

There is a difference between faith and hope. Hope looks to the future expecting that the thing you believe in will happen. Faith, on the other hand, is always present. It is always now. Faith believes that you received whatever you believed when you prayed. Now. Faith doesn’t look to the future. It looks to the now, to the present.

“Now Faith is the substance of things hoped for: the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1).

Don’t get me wrong: hope is good. But it’s just the starting point. Hope allows you to have a positive attitude. In other words, hope will allow you to have a smile on your face even while the ship is sinking. But faith will make you act! It will make you do something to keep your ship from sinking. It will cause you to find a way to stop up the hole and keep the water from coming in. Faith gives you something to look forward to. Faith brings to pass what you believe in.

Faith believes with the heart (now) and confesses with the mouth (now) that you (now) believe you have received what you desire from God. That is made perfectly clear in Mark 11:23-24.

For verily I say unto you, That whosoever shall say unto this mountain be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart, but believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass, he shall have whatsoever he saith. Therefore I say unto you, What things soever you desire when you pray, believe that you receive them, and you shall have them.

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Notice that in verse 23 the word say is mentioned four times, but the word believe only appears once. The revelation here is that you must say a thing four more times than you have to believe it.

A lot of people are doing a lot of saying, but unfortunately, they are not saying in faith. Their saying is not now faith but later faith.

Maybe you have heard someone say, “I know that God is going to bless me,” “My healing is just around the corner,” or “My new job is on the way.” You may have even said these words yourself. These are not faith-filled words because they are not spoken in the now. They are spoken in the future. Faith is now, and the words you speak in faith have to be in the now.

Sadly, most people who speak this way are doing so in ignorance of the Word. They are sincere in what they say and believe, but they are sincerely wrong. They don’t understand that as long as you believe with your heart and confess with your mouth that your blessing is “just around the corner,” that’s exactly where it will be. And chances are you’ll never make it around the corner, and the blessing will never find its way to you.

Having a “blessing right around the corner” mentality is not faith! It’s hope, and to a large degree it’s also doubt. Faith doesn’t sit around waiting for blessings that are just around the corner. No! Faith goes out and finds those blessings and brings them right to you wherever you are.

Speaking words that put your expectancy in the future instead of in the now is like putting your faith in a waiting mode or a holding pattern. When you get to one corner, your blessings will have moved to the next corner. And they’ll continue to move. You’ll find yourself chasing your blessings instead of calling them in.

You must align your confession with the now, not the later. Change your confession and begin speaking, “I believe I receive my blessings now, in Jesus’ name.” Agree with what God’s Word says.

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Faith It ’Til You Make It

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Since we have been created in the image of God, we must obtain results the same way He does—by speaking. God created the heavens and the Earth by speaking faith-filled words. He said, “Let there be light,” or as literally translated, “Light be!” He did not say, “Some day there will be some light around here,” or, “Lights are just around the corner.”

It is so ironic that the tongue, which is the very thing that can bless you, can also lead to your demise. Life and death are in the power of the tongue. One slip of it can mean defeat when you were headed for victory. Faith-filled words spoken from your mouth are the keys to your success. Notice I said “faith-filled words,” not just “words.”

Just for a minute, imagine you are standing in front of an eight-bedroom mansion. The owner hands you a bunch of keys and says, “If you pick the key that opens the door on the first try, I’ll give you the mansion.” Your desire, need, or sincerity would have nothing to do with whether you got into that mansion, would it? No. All you need to do is pick the right key. If you get it wrong, you will lock yourself out of the blessing.

That’s what happens to a lot of believers in the body of Christ. They live a lifetime of defeat because they use the wrong keys to obtain the blessings of God! Then they get upset when they see people of faith use the “right” keys (faith-filled words) and living in mansions, f lying in their own jets, and living virtually debt-free.

Listen! God is no respecter of persons. He is a respecter of faith-filled words. He wants the same for all His children—even you—but you have to use the right keys!

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Ch a p t er 3

Faith Is an Action

Another faith key is action. Don’t just speak what you believe, act as though you believe it. That means you must stop allowing your circumstances to dictate the way you conduct yourself. Learn to w alk by faith, not by sight.

You are not moved by circumstances and situations. You are not moved by what your bank account says. You are not moved by the doctor’s negative diagnosis. You are moved by what the Word of God says only! And on God’s words you base your actions.

You have to be totally controlled by the Word. Even when you can’t see the outcome in front of your face, believe the Word anyway. Why? Because the Word says it’s true and it says it is yours. Remember, faith is action!

God is not moved by need, pity, or tears. He is only moved by your faith! Since God does not lie, the safest thing to do is agree with what He says about your situation. That means two things must happen. First, you must study the Word and find out what God says about your situation, then agree with Him. Second, you have to confess only what the Word says about your situation.

You may have to separate yourself from your family and friends to accomplish one or both of these things. Negative talk from these sources can remove you from focusing on your faith. But the results, for you, will be well worth it.

I like that scripture in Luke 8:41-54 where Jesus was preparing to raise the ruler’s young daughter from the dead. Everyone around Him was

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Ben Tankard

filled with doubt and unbelief, saying things such as, “She is already dead or Jesus is too late.”

Well, do you know what Jesus did? The Word says, “And He put them all out.” Hallelujah! Jesus did not have time for doubt and unbelief. He cleared the room of all unbelief. There may be some people around you who need to be “put out” in order for your faith to work. If so, put them out! You must guard the gate of your faith.

Let me give you an example of what I mean by this. I remember when I moved to Nashville from Tallahassee, Florida. It was a monumental move for me because I got away from all the naysayers—those who said I would never make it. I escaped those who told me that “GospelJazz” would never be accepted. At times it may have looked as if they were right. But I would not allow what things looked like or what naysayers said to deter me. I remembered the words several strong, faith-filled speakers had spoken to me: “Faith is action!”

I chose to believe the opposite of what things looked like. I chose to believe I had faith as a grain of mustard seed, just like Jesus said, and that I could ask for whatever I would and I would receive it. I believed Mark 11:24: “What things soever ye desire, when you pray, believe that you receive them, and you shall have them.” I also refused to dwell among “haters”.

Today, I am reaping the blessings of believing in and standing on the promises of God. I have a thriving worldwide ministry, have recorded eighteen successful albums, received twelve Stellar Awards, three Grammy nominations, and eight nominations for the Dove Award. God has given me a lovely wife and family, placed us in a beautiful mansion, given us nice cars to drive, two airplanes, and a new office building and church sanctuary. Hollywood has even taken notice of God’s great blessings on the Tankards and we have our own reality TV show!

How did all this happen to us? I assure you it had nothing to do with my own abilities. No, it was all God. It was His faithfulness to His Word.