Daily Prayer & Praise 8/02/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, you exceed our greatest thought, you blow away our deepest meditation and you completely overwhelm us with the utter and absolute sufficiency of your grace. We praise you for the coming of Christ and for the power of your Holy Spirit, and for the assurance that they give us that you are our God and that we are loved. We call you wonderful, because that is what you are. Your presence, mercy and love hold our lives, fill us with joy and give us hope. We bring our praise in the name of Christ our Lord.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 8/02/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Wednesday Reflecting

“No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.” – Matthew 6:24.

When you see a dog following two men, you know not to which of them he belongs while they walk together; but let them come to a parting road, and one go one way, and the other another way, then you will know which is the dog’s master. So at times will you and the world go hand in hand. While a man may have the world, and a religious profession too, we cannot tell which is the man’s master, God or the world: but stay till the man comes to a parting road; God calls him this way, and the world calls him that way. Well, if God be his master, he follows religion, and lets the world go; but if the world be his master, then he follows the world and the lusts thereof, and lets God, and conscience, and religion go.
~ R. ERSKINE

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Psalm 18:35

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Wednesday August 2, 2023

Psalm 18:35
Your gentleness has made me great.

The blessed Comforter is gentle, tender, and full of patience and love. How gentle are God’s dealings even with sinners! How patient His forbearance! How tender His discipline with His own erring children! How He led Jacob, Joseph, Israel, David, Elijah, and all His ancient servants, until they could truly say, “Thy gentleness hath made me great.”

The heart in which the Holy Spirit dwells will always be characterized by gentleness, lowliness, quietness, meekness, and forbearance. The rude, sarcastic spirit, the brusque manner, the sharp retort, the unkind cut—all these belong to the flesh, but they have nothing in common with the gentle teaching of the Comforter.

The Holy Dove shrinks from the noisy, tumultuous, excited, and vindictive spirit, and finds His home in the lowly breast of the peaceful soul. “The fruit of the Spirit is gentleness, meekness.”

Lord, make me gentle. Hush my spirit. Refine my manner. Let me have Christ in my bearing and my very tones as well as in my heart.

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A. B. Simpson, Days of Heaven upon Earth: A Year Book of Scripture Texts and Living Truths (Christian Alliance Pub. Co., 1897)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 8/02/2023

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Unsinkable Ship

At the time of the sinking of the Titanic, one of our great American preachers was in Belfast, Ireland. The Titanic had been built in Belfast, and there was a great local pride over the mighty ship. She had been heralded far and wide as “the unsinkable ship.” Sixteen members of the church in Belfast, all skilled mechanics, went down with her. The mayor said that Belfast had never been in such grief as that which came over this terrible tragedy. When the news finally was verified that the gallant ship was certainly lost, so deep was the grief that it is said strong men met upon the streets, grasped each other’s hands, burst into tears, and parted without a word.

The visiting American preached the Sunday after the tragedy in the church to which the sixteen members who had been lost belonged. Not only was the building packed with peoples but on the platform were lords, bishops, and ministers of all denominations. In the audience, many newly-made widows were sitting and orphans were sobbing on every side. The great preacher took as his subject “The Unsinkable Ship.” But he did not apply that term to the Titanic which on her first voyage had gone out into the Atlantic and crashed into an iceberg, carrying her precious cargo of human lives down to watery death.

No, the preacher’s message was about that other “unsinkable ship”—the frail boat on the sea of Galilee, unsinkable because the Master of land and sea was asleep on a pillow in the afterpart of the vessel. Thank God He still lives and rides the billows and controls the storms, and when the children of men take their only true Pilot back on board, we will ride out the present storms and He will bring the vessel through to the fair harbor of our hopes.
~ American Fundamentalist

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Spiritual Nuggets 8/02/2023

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Gifts and Grace

“Yahweh spoke to Moses on the desert plains of Moab beyond the Jordan across Jericho, saying, ‘Command the children of Israel that they give to the Levites from the inheritance of their property cities to live in; and you will give to the Levites pastureland all around the cities’ ” (Numbers 35:1–2).

The idea of giving is ancient. Before God’s people even enter the promised land, they’re commanded to help the Levites—who will be serving them as spiritual leaders—by giving them cities. Now that God has given to the people, He asks that they give back to His work. There is an opportunity for obedience, and this obedience will come with the blessing of continued spiritual guidance from the people to whom they are giving the land. But giving is not the only concept at play here.

Shortly after this, God asks the people to provide refuge cities for murderers (Numbers 35:6–8). He institutes a system of grace—a type of house arrest. The idea that synagogues and churches are places where criminals can find refuge (sanctuary) likely finds its origins in this.

This system of grace also manifests itself in types of hospitality. We see this several times in Paul’s letters. For example, Paul’s relationship with the Corinthians was on the rocks, yet he still requests hospitality for his fellow ministry worker: “But if Timothy comes, see that he is with you without cause to fear, for he is carrying out the Lord’s work, as I also am. Therefore do not let anyone disdain him, but send him on his way in peace in order that he may come to me, for I am expecting him with the brothers” (1 Corinthians 16:10–11).

God is gracious, and He calls us to be the same way—even when we don’t want to, and even when our sense of justice makes being gracious frustrating.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Who Is Man To You, O God? – 3

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Scripture References: Psalm 8

I. God’s Praise – Continued

God is not God because He performs miracles that convince us He is God. He is not God because we believe Him to be God. He is not God because we trust Him to be God. He is God whether or not we believe in Him. Our faith does not make Him God. But unless you choose to approach Him with faith, it doesn’t make a bit of difference what else may occur. You still won’t believe Him.

You believe what you choose to believe, either coming with faith or doubt, with faith or skepticism. It is your choice. We can neither explain it nor understand it. In the world most people do not claim the name of God unless in a cursing manner, yet the live and act as if God doesn’t exist. But in spite of the world’s infidelity, “O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Your name, in all the earth!” He is there. He is here.

The key is: Our Lord. He is not merely God in a detached manner. He is my Lord, my God. The truth of the Word of God is not simply that there is a theology or a philosophy that claims there is a God who somewhere and somehow exists, but the absolute truth of the Word is that the Lord of all the universe, the mystery and infinitude of eternity, is the God who is my God. Here is the Lord’s praise. “O Lord, . . . how excellent is Your name in all the earth! Who have set Your glory above the heavens.” The heavens cannot contain the glory of God. God had to put His glory above the heavens.

Gaze into the vastness of outer space. Month after month astronomers discover new galaxies and stars. Christian scientists believe that God is still expanding His universe. Yet if they could reach to the end of all the innumerable galaxies of the universe, it is still too small to contain the glory of God above the heavens. When you focus the eyes of the heart upon the glory of God, the majesty of God; when you begin to comprehend who God is and begin to praise Him, it pinpoints an entirely new light upon life each and every day. The psalmist starts out with the Lord’s praise. In verses 2 and 3, he extols the Lord’s power.

II. The Lord’s Power

In the Lord’s name there is a superabundance of majesty. The name of the Lord is majestic, awesome, powerful. And the psalmist speaks initially about the name of the Lord as being a mighty conqueror. In verse 2 he declares that when his accusers, his avengers, his enemies try to attack God, “Out of the mouth of babes and nursing infants You have ordained strength.” God Himself asserts, “My glory is so powerful, My nature so strong that when all the might of an evil world marshals its forces to discredit, attack, and condemn Me, just the praise in the mouth of a baby is sufficient to sustain My strength in the world.” The cry of a little infant is all the defense that God needs. The mere fact that we can conceive of God and from our earliest years we can express a desire for God, is convincing evidence of God. God is such a conqueror that the words of children carry far greater weight than all the accusations of mighty men.

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 8/01/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, we praise you for your extravagant love and your life-transforming grace; for your holiness and for the utter perfection of all that you are and everything you do. Lord, you are completely out of our reach. There is nowhere we can go to find you, yet in your mercy you seek us out. There is nothing we can say or do or accomplish that will make us worthy of your love, yet in Christ you have claimed us for yourself. There is nothing about our lives or our achievements – nothing about our commitment, worship or service –that makes us more acceptable, yet you have chosen to fill us with your Spirit. In the name of Christ Jesus our Lord, we pray.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 8/01/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Tuesday Reflecting

“For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” – Matthew 6:21.

A friend of mine who had been in Eastern lands told me he saw a shepherd who wanted his flock to cross a river. He went into the water himself and called them; but no, they would not follow him into the water. What did he do? Why, he girded up his loins, and lifted a little lamb under each arm and plunged right into the stream, and crossed it without even looking back. When he lifted the lambs the old sheep looked up into his face and began to bleat for them; but when he plunged into the water the dams plunged after him, and then the whole flock followed. When they got to the other side he put down the lambs, and they were quickly joined by their mothers, and there was a happy meeting. Our great Divine Shepherd does this. Your child which He has taken from the earth is but removed to the green pastures of Canaan, and the Shepherd means to draw your hearts after it, to teach you to “set your affections on things above.”
~ D. L. MOODY

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Sovereign Grace and Man’s Responsibility

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Tuesday August 1, 2023

Romans 10:20-21
But Isaiah is very bold and says: “I was found by those who did not seek Me; I was made
manifest to those who did not ask for Me.” But to Israel he says: “All day long
I have stretched out My hands To a disobedient and contrary people.”

I see in one place, God presiding over all in providence; and yet I see, and I cannot help seeing, that man acts as he pleases, and that God has left his actions to his own will, in a great measure. Now, if I were to declare that man was so free to act, that there was no control of God over his actions, I should be driven very near to atheism; and if, on the other hand, I declare that God so overrules all things, as that man is not free enough to be responsible, I am driven at once into Antinomianism or fatalism. That God predestines, and that man is responsible, are two things that few can see. They are believed to be inconsistent and contradictory; but they are not. It is just the fault of our weak judgment. Two truths cannot be contradictory to each other. If, then, I find taught in one place that everything is fore-ordained, that is true; and if I find in another place that man is responsible for all his actions, that is true; and it is my folly that leads me to imagine that two truths can ever contradict each other. These two truths, I do not believe, can ever be welded into one upon any human anvil, but one they shall be in eternity: they are two lines that are so nearly parallel, that the mind that shall pursue them farthest, will never discover that they converge; but they do converge, and they will meet somewhere in eternity, close to the throne of God, whence all truth springs.

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C. H. Spurgeon and Terence Peter Crosby, 365 Days with Spurgeon (Volume 1) (Day One Publications, 1998)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 8/01/2023

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He Carried Boy and Burden

A preacher was busy in his study, while his little boy looked at a book of pictures by the fireside. He suddenly wanted a large book he had left upstairs, and asked his boy to go for it. He was away a long time, and after a while the father heard the sound of sobbing on the stairs. He went out, and at the top of the staircase he saw his son crying bitterly, with the large book he had tried to lift and carry, lying at his feet. “Oh, Daddy,” he cried, “I can’t carry it. It’s too heavy for me.”

In a moment, the father was up the stairs, and stooping down, took up both the book and the little fellow in his strong arms, and carried them both to the room below. “And that,” he found himself thinking later, “is how God deals with His children.”
~ Methodist Recorder

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Spiritual Nuggets 8/01/2023

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Taunting Death

My best friend’s mother, a dear family friend, died of Lou Gehrig’s disease (ALS). Over the span of three years, the disease attacked her nerve cells, starting with her hands and feet and moving inward to her vital organs. Every time I visited her, she would be changed—her cane became a wheelchair, and her warbled words were muffled into silence. Although she was fully alert, she slowly lost the ability to communicate her feelings and needs. In the end, only her eyes displayed the tumultuous feelings underneath.

Those who confront the reality of death or the death of a loved one don’t doubt their own fallibility. They are closely acquainted with the reality that so many strangely disregard. And they cling to the hope of the resurrection that Paul eloquently relays, and that the Corinthians were slow to understand and believe: “We will all be changed, in a moment, in the blink of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed” (1 Corinthians 15:51–52).

Christ’s death and victory over sin and death bring this life to those who believe in Him. His victory is the cause for Paul’s subsequent taunting of death—taunts that rip through with joy for those who realize Christ’s victory: “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting? Now the sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!” (1 Corinthians 15:55–57).

Lest we think we are any different, the process of death is happening to us and to those around us. Lou Gehrig’s disease is a fast-forward version of the human existence. Why, then, do we keep quiet about the hope within us? “So then . . . be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord” (1 Corinthians 15:58).

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Who Is Man To You, O God? – 2

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Scripture References: Psalm 8

I. God’s Praise

These verses open and close the same: “O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Your name in all the earth!” I’ve heard and read many who call this an “envelope psalm.” It starts and finishes the same way, and the truth is wrapped up in between. Come to the end, and you reach the start. The psalm goes on in an eternal cycle of emphasis on the glorious excellence of God’s name. Here is the praise of the Lord God. It is almost as if the psalmist were unable to express God’s glory, and all he could do was add an exclamation point. Sometimes it appears that the name of God is not acknowledged in all the earth, but His name is indeed acknowledged as excellent in the hearts of all of those who have known Him.

There are millions of Muslims who claim Allah as their god. There are millions of Buddhists who bow before altars and shrines to Buddha. There are millions of Hindus who grovel before myriads of idols. There are still millions of communists and atheists who claim there is no God, yet they worship their ideologies as gods, and yet there are countless millions of others who testify with their words that God does exist but who live as if He does not. In spite of how people ignore the reality of God, the truth is that the name of God is majestic and excellent in all of the earth.

All across the world, millions claim the name of Jehovah God of the Old Testament. Emmanuel (“God with us”) is the name He was given in the New Testament (Matthew 1:23). Jesus (“Jehovah is salvation”) is Immanuel, and the whole creation is full of His glory. There is no place where God is not. He is omnipresent. Everywhere He is seen. Many people argue, “I don’t see him and I’m not alone,  many others don’t see Him either.” Let it be understood: you can never, with rational processes, understand God, but when you come to Him with faith, He is perfectly understandable, but only through faith in Christ. You can never, with reasoning, ascertain the veracity of the Word of God, but when you approach it with faith, it reveals itself to be absolutely truth. You see only what you want to see.

If you choose to receive Christ in faith, that is your choice. If you choose to doubt, that is also your choice. A major problem is that many people who attend church say, “Prove Yourself to me, God.” In doubt, they demand that God prove Himself to them. That is exactly like the Pharisees of Jesus’ time; “show us a miracle from heaven and we will believe.” If that is your selfish desire, God will never do it. Remember Jesus’ account of the rich man and Lazarus (see Luke 16:19–31). They both died, and the rich man went to hell. In torment he lifted up his eyes, and he saw Lazarus in Abraham’s bosom, and he cried, “Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue; for I am tormented in this flame.” That was not possible because of the “great gulf,” the wide chasm, between them, and so the rich man had another idea.

“I beg you therefore, father, that you would send him [Lazarus] to my father’s house, for I have five brothers, that he may testify to them, lest they also come to this place of torment.” Remember Abraham’s solemn reply, “They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them. . . . If they do not hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rise from the dead.”

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 7/31/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Almighty God, our heavenly Father, we praise you that you underlined the importance of your day with a commandment to keep it holy, set apart to be used differently. We praise you for Christ’s life, death and resurrection that has transformed the Sabbath day of rest into a day to do good, to seek renewal and to be open to the power of the risen Christ. May what we say and how we say it, may what we do and how we do it, may how we use your day and how we focus our hearts on you in it, bring you glory, and may our lives and relationships bring you joy. In the name of Christ, the Prince of Peace.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 7/31/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Monday Reflecting

“Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” – Matthew 6:10.

There is a cathedral in Europe with an organ at each end. Organ answers organ, and the music waves backward and forward with indescribable effect. The time will come when heaven and earth will be but different parts of one great accord. It will be joy here and joy there! Jesus here and Jesus there! Trumpet to trumpet! Organ to organ! Hallelujah to hallelujah.
~ TALMAGE

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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The Never-Failing Presence

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Monday July 31, 2023

John 16:7
Nevertheless I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I go away;
for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you;
but if I depart, I will send Him to you.

Our insensibility to the presence of the Spirit is one of the greatest losses that our unbelief and preoccupation have cost us. We have made Him a tenet of our creed, we have enclosed Him in a religious word, but we have known Him little in personal experience. Satan has hindered us all he could by raising conflicting opinions about the Spirit, by making Him a topic for hot and uncharitable debate between Christians. In the meanwhile our hearts crave Him, and we hardly know what the craving means.

It would help us if we could remember that the Spirit is Himself God, the very nature of the Godhead subsisting in a form that can impart itself to our consciousness. . . .

The Spirit is sent to be our Friend, to guide us over the long way home. He is Christ’s own Self come to live with us, allowing Him to fulfill His word, “Lo, I am with you always,” (Matthew 28:20) even while He sits at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens.

It will be a new day for us when we put away false notions and foolish fears and allow the Holy Spirit to fellowship with us as intimately as He wants to do. . . . After that there can be no more loneliness, only the glory of the never-failing Presence.

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Tozer on the Almighty God : A 366-Day Devotional (WingSpread, 2004)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 7/31/2023

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Jonathan Edwards’ Conversion

Jonathan Edwards was suddenly converted, as by a flash of light, in the moment of reading a single verse of the New Testament. He was at home in his father’s house; some hindrances kept him from going to church one Sunday with the family. A couple of hours with nothing to do sent him listlessly into the library; the sight of a dull volume with no title on the leather back of it evoked curiosity as to what it could be; he opened it at random and found it to be a Bible; and then his eye caught this verse: “Now unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory for ever and ever. Amen!”

He tells us in his journal that the immediate effect of it was awakening and alarming to his soul, for it brought him a most novel and most extensive thought of the vastness and majesty of the true Sovereign of the universe. Out of this grew the pain of guilt for having resisted such a Monarch so long, and for having served Him so poorly. And whereas he had hitherto had slight notions of his own wickedness and very little poignancy of acute remorse, now he felt the deepest contrition.

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Spiritual Nuggets 7/31/2023

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Prayer and Hope for the Anxious

Anxiety, depression, and fear aren’t part of the Christian life—or the ideal Christian life, anyway. But for those who struggle with these emotions, this tidy concept isn’t helpful or true. What is helpful is hope and belief in the midst of tumultuous emotion.

The writer of Psalm 28 expresses deep anxiety, but even as he does this, he expresses trust in Yahweh: “To you, O Yahweh, I call. O my rock, do not be deaf to me. Or else, if you are silent to me, then I will become like those descending to the pit” (Psalm 28:1). Though he feels like God is not listening, the psalmist doesn’t stop pursuing God. He worships and cries for help anyway. In contrast to the “workers of evil” who “do not regard the works of Yahweh, nor the work of his hands,” the psalmist puts all of his dependence and trust in Yahweh (Psalm 28:3, 5).

Halfway through the psalm, the petition turns to praise when Yahweh answers his prayer. The psalmist realizes his confidence is in the right place: “Blessed is Yahweh, because he has heard the voice of my supplications” (Psalm 28:6). Even through dark times and bleak circumstances, God is faithful. He is never far from us, though emotions might dictate otherwise. He will “Shepherd them also and carry them always” (Psalm 28:9). He saves, blesses, guides, and even carries us through all seasons.

We are saved not according to our own works, but the work of Christ. In the midst of struggle, we can be certain that we are experiencing salvation now, in part. And we can be “convinced of this same thing, that the one who began a good work in [us] will finish it until the day of Christ Jesus” (Philippians 1:6).

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Who Is Man To You, O God? – 1

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Scripture References: Psalm 8

The second most important question that has ever been asked is confronted in this psalm. The most important question is: “What do you think about the Christ?” (Matthew 22:42). That is the basic question of life for all of us. Until you properly answer that question, none of the others matter. What one does with Jesus Christ is the bedrock, foundational question, and pursuit in every person’s heart.

The second most important question is found in verse 4 of this psalm. “What is man that You are mindful of him, And the son of man that You visit him?” Who am I? What did God make me to be? What kind of being is man? Charles Darwin postulated that man is merely a highly developed animal. Is that what man is? Sigmund Freud’s concept was that man was just an underdeveloped child. Karl Marx stated that man is basically an economic factor in the world. Isaiah, pooling the collective wisdom of mankind, wrote that all men are like grass, and he magnified the temporary nature of man on this earth, in the fact that we are quickly passing away.

Is there an answer to the riddle of mankind? What is man? What is the “son of man” that God visits him or that God is concerned for him?

Whatever answer mankind may give to the question, “What is man?” God is the only one who has the right answer. Psalm 8 presents God’s answer to the riddle of mankind, the question, What is man? God answers and asserts that He created us to be kings, to have dominion, to have authority. He fashioned mankind as the apex, the climax, the crowning achievement of His creative genius. Man was created by God, but the problem is that we don’t act like royalty. Our crowns have become tarnished. In fact, history demonstrates that we act more like slaves than sovereigns, more like knaves than kings. What happened? People through the ages have remarked, “I don’t understand why God created mankind the way it is.” Here’s the truth: God didn’t create mankind the way it is, though He knew it would become the way it is.

God created only two people, and He was perfectly delighted with them. He saw that His work was “good” and “very good.” What we look with abhorrence at today is not mankind as God created it but mankind as sin has made it, as it has dethroned him, has debased him, and defiled him. So the perfect image God had in His heart for mankind was before sin entered into human experience. God created mankind for dominion, to have authority, to be “crowned . . . with glory and honor.”  Man lost the royal nature that was in him. How can we restore that position? How does one recapture what God intended us to be? How do we live up to our full potential, reach that possibility God has desired for us?

Within every person’s heart, is an emptiness, a deep-down hunger that is filled only in God. Only as God is given liberty to move into our lives do we ever begin to reach our intended potential. Does or can an individual ever become what God created him to be and what he in his heart longs to be? This psalm answers that question. The first point and the last point are the same. The first point I call God’s praise from verse 1. The last point is God’s position ending in verse 9.

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Saturday Prayer & Praise 7/29/2023

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Matthew Henry: Piercing Heaven – Puritan’s Prayers

Lord, you have said that you will be set apart in those who approach you, and before all people you will be glorified. So we worship you, Lord, to glorify your name.

We call on you to deliver us. For all things are of you, and through you, and to you.

We do not approach you in prayer because of our own righteousness. Our sins prevent us from standing before you, but we make mention of Christ’s righteousness—his alone. He is our righteousness.

We know that spiritual sacrifices are acceptable to you only through Christ Jesus. And we cannot hope to receive anything, unless we ask you on his behalf.

Therefore make us accepted in the Beloved, the one who adds much incense to the prayers of saints, and offers them up upon the golden altar before the throne. We come in the name of the great high priest, who is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God.

He was touched with the feeling of our infirmities, and is therefore able to save to the uttermost all those that come to God by him. He lives forever, making intercession.

See our shield, O God, and look on the face of your Anointed. With a voice from heaven, you declared yourself well pleased in him. Lord, in him be well pleased with us.

Amen.

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Faith From The Beginning 7/29/2023

Mortify The Flesh

HERE is a great lesson in the adventure of faith. When we have received Christ we are no longer a part of this world, but the flesh is still with us and must be dealt with. This was not the only lesson concerning separation in Abram’s life, to be sure. Later on he must separate himself from Lot, then he must sacrifice his own son, Isaac, and finally even Sarah must be buried. Sanctification is not one single spiritual experience, but a series of burials, a succession of funerals, of judgments upon the flesh, or, as Paul puts it, of daily deaths, daily mortifications of the old man and of the flesh and of the world.

Many believers stand in desperate need of just such an experience today. Those whom God has greatly used in the past will testify that, after they were saved, there came a time, when God called for a definite surrender of their lives before they could be fully used of Him. Call it whatever you will, but when we specifically obey God in putting away that of which we have been convicted by the Word, there comes a definite blessing and a going forward spiritually. Such an experience, however, doesn’t just happen once in the Christian’s life, but often.

As Abram walked with God he received new light all along the way, which called for new yielding and new obedience as he grew in faith. New obedience came when he separated from Lot, when he refused the spoils of Sodom, when he was obedient to God concerning his own son, Isaac. There were blessings all along the way, second, third, fourth and fifth blessings. As often as we follow new light and yield ourselves to His will, we too may experience the fresh blessing of the Almighty.

The rest of the record of Abram in the following scriptures is precious. He comes to Sichem, the place of strength; then to Moreh, the place of instruction; then to Bethel, the house of God, where God appears again to him, communes with him and renews the covenant. Here Abram builds an altar and calls upon the Name of the Lord. He is now back in full fellowship again, because he has been obedient.

In closing, I would apply this lesson personally to you who are believers. You, too, are saved, but let me ask you, are you making any progress? Do you enjoy your salvation? Is God answering your prayers? Does His Word become more precious to you as you go along? Or, are you unhappy, doubting, fruitless, cold and still desiring fleshly things? Then listen my friend, you need a funeral in your life. There is something that must go, something to be buried before you can go on. Abraham was stopped at Haran until Terah died. He had to dig a grave first.

What is it in your own life which hinders you and keeps you from the joy of the Christian life? From what do you need to be separated? You know what it is. Is it some secret sin, some habit, some lust, some fleshly thing you are pampering and condoning and excusing? Is it some worldly practice, pride, dishonesty, gossip, an unforgiving spirit, bitterness, a sharp tongue, an uncontrolled and unyielded temper, stubbornness or hatred? Remember, before you can go on, it has to go. Your personal Terah, the old man, must be buried. Why not stop now, confess your sin to the Lord Jesus, trust Him to give you the victory, and go on to the place of joy and fruit bearing? Be honest and put your sin away, turn your life over to Him once for all and experience the new joy of His presence and fellowship. Dig that grave in Haran now, and go on to the life of victory in Canaan.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Studies in the Life of Abraham by M. R. De Haan (1891-1964)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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