Saturday Morning Promises – Alms That Became Legs

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Saturday Morning Promises – Great Stories

Now Peter and John went up together to the temple at the hour of prayer, the ninth hour. And a certain man lame from his mother’s womb was carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful, to ask alms from those who entered the temple; who, seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple, asked for alms. And fixing his eyes on him, with John, Peter said, “Look at us.” So he gave them his attention, expecting to receive something from them. Then Peter said, “Silver and gold I do not have, but what I do have I give you: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise up and walk.” And he took him by the right hand and lifted him up, and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength. So he, leaping up, stood and walked and entered the temple with them–walking, leaping, and praising God. And all the people saw him walking and praising God. Then they knew that it was he who sat begging alms at the Beautiful Gate of the temple; and they were filled with wonder and amazement at what had happened to him. (Acts 3:1-10)

Alms That Became Legs

It was a day as every day in his life. He knew nothing else. As a child he was carried everywhere. He knew he was different. Everyone else could walk but he could not. Because of his condition the family suffered. He was unable to work. No one could spend all day caring for him so they began to take him to the Temple among the beggars. What a humiliating life. Unable to move he sat as a mendicant stretching out his hand for others to put a few coins in. He would never know the joys of life as so many others.

As the sunlight sprinkled through the pillars of the Temple near a gate called Beautiful two figures caught his eye. Just like he had done countless times before he put forth his hand mumbling words of pity. The two men stopped and as their shadows cast upon the man’s face they asked of him to look at them. Anxiously he gave them his attention as few men would take the time to give attention to a poor beggar. Thousands walked by him every day and if any gift was given it would have been with little regard but a toss of a coin or two. These two men had stopped. They were talking with him. He was told to look at them. How pleasant their eyes looked. There was something different about these men the beggar seldom witnessed. It seemed the eyes of these men looked deep into his soul with a feeling of love and compassion. As he intently looked into the eyes of Peter and John he felt like a man who was loved by another human being.

At first the words rang hallow. He listened as the two men told him they had no silver or gold to give. How disappointed he was. Why did they stop? Are they playing a cruel joke? The mind processes thoughts so quickly his heart immediately fell knowing this day would not reap a bounty of coin. But the men continued speaking saying something about giving him a gift they did have. He heard words he never knew could be said. It was numbing to think these words were being said to him. For the past few years he had heard it being done by a man from Nazareth but he was never able to find Him. It was of no avail as he learned the teacher had been killed as a criminal a few months prior. What did these men want?

Peter took the beggar by the right hand and that is when it happened. He had never known the sensation before but there was life in his legs. Immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength. The Holy Spirit through Luke made note of the feet and ankle bones. He was standing. No, he was leaping. What is going on – he is walking. Casting aside his beggar garments with tears streaming down his face he cared nothing for the gold and silver or anything else. Praise God he had received the greatest gift of all time. He was walking, leaping, jumping, running – he was free. He was walking on air. He could walk on water if there was some nearby. Oh my – what a day.

We are beggars. Never forget the joy of the day we learned to walk in Christ. Leap and jump for joy today as we think of the life Jesus Christ gave our dead bodies. Praise God today. This is a great story.

A positive thing: in joy one does not only feel secure, but something goes out from one’s self to the universe, a warm, possessive effluence of love. (John Buchan, Pilgrim’s Way, 1940)

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Friday Morning Reflections – Jemimah, Keziah and Keren-Happuch

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Friday Morning Reflections – Wisdom Literature

And he called the name of the first Jemimah, the name of the second Keziah, and the name of the third Keren-Happuch. In all the land were found no women so beautiful as the daughters of Job; and their father gave them an inheritance among their brothers. After this Job lived one hundred and forty years, and saw his children and grandchildren for four generations. So Job died, old and full of days. (Job 42:14-17)

Jemimah, Keziah And Keren-Happuch

The story of Job is a powerful testimony to a devoted faith in God as a righteous man faced an onslaught of personal crisis, health ruin and friends who could do nothing but criticize. Reeling under the terrible calamities that befell him Job struggled to maintain a proper view of his life. The length of the story brings sorrow to the reader for all the pain endured by one man. In the conclusion of the book Elihu rises to the top to bring clarity to Job and his three friends. And then the Lord God Almighty challenges Job from the whirlwind. As the story comes to an end Job has restored to him as much as he had before and even more. The struggle was over. The story completed.

As the dust settles from the story we see a bright day of hope as Job is blessed with more than he ever had before. In an unusual turn of events for scripture it is mentioned he had seven sons and three daughters and then names the three daughters (excluding the names of the sons) and shows how these three daughters received an inheritance among their brothers. Jemimah was the first daughter and her name meant “fair as the day.” Keziah was the second daughter born to Job and her name was likened to the “Hebrew name of the spice which the Greeks and Romans called “cassia,” a spice closely allied to cinnamon, and much esteemed in the East” (Pulpit Commentary). Job’s third daughter Keren-Happuch was derived from a dye used to anoint the upper and lower eyelids revealing the beauty of the eyes. All three girls were so beautiful that none so fair could be found in the land.

Job had many blessings before his journey of suffering. But the blessings after his toil were more than even he could imagine. It was of such significance he gave his daughters an inheritance which was rarely done in the Eastern culture. The sons received inheritance and were named throughout scripture but not the women. However the Holy Spirit left a gem within the text of Job to remind us of our own story of life. There is a parabolic story of our lives taken from the book of Job. We can be blessed with so many things in life and find ourselves facing the struggle of sorrow, death, loss of everything and health reversals. The book of Job is not so much about suffering as it is the victory of faith in a child of God. We can feel the same despair as Job who sought to find answers but to no avail. Many will try to explain and comfort us with their words of wisdom failing to find the true answers apart from God. We then stand in the presence of God in Job 38-42 and witness His great power. It is then we find the blessings of God more than the beginning. Life is like that. So is eternity.

There can be many reasons why the Holy Spirit chooses to name the three daughters and describe their beauty. It could simply be a message for all of us who suffer the pains of life to know that something beyond description is coming. Something so beautiful there is nothing in this life to compare. I can only imagine as the health of Job returned and his children and grandchildren were born to him that he looked into their faces and saw God. He lived to be an old man full of days. And then he found something even more beautiful – eternal life with no more pain, no sorrow, no death and no tears.

Heaven at present is out of sight, but in due time, as snow melts and discovers what it lay upon, so will this visible creation fade away before those greater splendors which are behind it. (John Henry Newman, Parochial and Plain Sermons, 4, 1843)

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Thursday Morning Thankfulness – The Lord’s Bond-Servant

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Thursday Morning Thankfulness – Epistles of Paul

And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness. God may perhaps grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth, and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will. (2 Timothy 2:24-26)

The Lord’s Bond-Servant

Preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ is one of the greatest joys man can be a part of. It is a servants work requiring peculiar devotion to the purpose of teaching others the word of God. There is an overwhelming feeling of gratitude to be allowed to impart the mind of God to others but with a cautionary acceptance of receiving the heavier judgment because of it. Not all men are suited to preach the word of truth. Some do not receive the work as servants and without a humble spirit find themselves preaching for personal gain. The work of an evangelist is to serve as a sacrificial representation of the Lord who left the greatest example of servitude. His final lesson to the disciples at the Passover was to wash their feet. The hands of the preacher must be cleansed through the bathing of others feet.

The Lord’s bond-servant is not a quarrelsome servant. He does not strive about matters in a confrontational spirit imposing his will on others. So often men can become entangled in foolish arguments that do nothing but bring about strife. The preacher of the Book is only a spokesman of what the Book declares allowing the Spirit of God to convict the heart. When men begin to enforce their will on others in a haughty confrontational manner they fail to be bond-servants of the Lord.

Kindness is in the heart of God’s proclaimers. His heart is filled with the message of grace because he needs the Lord’s grace as much as the next person (often more so). His words are kind, his actions are kind and his demeanor is filled with the gentle character of humility. The power and conviction of salvation is in the word not the attitude of the preacher. The word convicts and is sufficient to accomplish its goal. This does not preclude the teaching of difficult and hard matters of faith. Jesus taught very hard lessons to the Pharisees with a spirit of love yet firmness to the truth. His kindness was evident to all.

The servant of the Lord remembers what his work is all about: teaching others the good news of Jesus Christ. Teaching is sharing the good words creating in the hearts of others the love and desire of godliness in their lives. Preaching the word stands against the wiles of the devil affirming the only salvation given to man. Correction is done in love as the Father chastens us with His love. When a preacher corrects a challenger with the gospel of Jesus Christ he remembers the power of conversion is in the word. Correcting an opponent with gentleness allows the gospel to convict the heart.

May God raise up men who will embrace the work of preaching as bond-servants of the King of Kings giving their lives to sharing the gospel of salvation with the lost. No greater joy can anyone share than helping another find Jesus Christ and eternal life through the Word. The preacher knows it is not about him but about He who gave all. The words we share are mere echoes of what we have learned through the grace of God. Thank you God for your love.

He is the best speaker who can turn the ear into an eye. (Arab Proverb)

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Wednesday Morning Meditation – Trusting In The Lord Dismisses Fear

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Wednesday Morning Meditation – Psalms

Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good! For His mercy endures forever. Let Israel now say, “His mercy endures forever.” Let the house of Aaron now say, “His mercy endures forever.” Let those who fear the Lord now say, “His mercy endures forever.” I called on the Lord in distress; the Lord answered me and set me in a broad place. The Lord is on my side; I will not fear. What can man do to me? The Lord is for me among those who help me; therefore I shall see my desire on those who hate me. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in princes. (Psalm 118:1-9)

Trusting In The Lord Dismisses Fear

The Psalms are rich with the deep faith of God’s people proclaiming their love and trust for Him. Their challenges are not unlike what we face today. Resonating from every psalm the reader is drawn to the personal relationship in how they overcame difficult circumstances by faith and dependence on the Lord God. For the Christian in modern day America the psalms are pertinent as society swirls deeper into ungodliness. Listen to what the unknown psalmist declares for man today.

HIS MERCY ENDURES FOREVER. The joyful message of the psalm understands that God is always present to care for His children. His love endures forever and is without wavering. We serve the same God Abraham loved and felt the love of God in his life. The Lord cared for and watched over Abraham – He will do that for us today. When I look at the moon at night I cannot help but think that Abraham, Moses, David, Jeremiah and the early disciples looked upon the same moon. It has remained constant since the beginning of time when Adam first beheld its beauty. So God’s love and mercy glows in the darkness of this world for me.

THE LORD IS ON MY SIDE. In whatever distress the author finds himself the Lord delivered him. The deliverance was so complete the Lord put him on a “broad place” to be secure. There is nothing to fear because God is on our side. What is there in this life to fear? Take a moment and think about what that means. There is nothing – nothing – to fear (disease, famine, peril, persecution, death, etc.) because God is on our side. We face a lot of uncertainties but with God there are no uncertainties. Like Peter walking on the water, our faith wavers when we take our eyes off the one who saves. Remember Jesus never took His eyes off of Peter. He saved the Galilean fisherman by His power.

I TRUST IN THE LORD. There is no one that has proven His trustworthiness more than the Lord God. We must trust in the Lord because His mercy is everlasting. We must trust in the Lord because no one can deliver us like the Lord God. Every time we put our trust in man failure comes. At best man is too frail to be completely trustworthy. We sin. We fail. We are unable to hold integrity in purity. Our confidence must be in the one who is ageless, all-powerful, all-knowing and all-loving. One of the great blessings of trusting in the Lord is He knows my every need. He also knows the answers to all my needs. What a great God we serve who blesses us with His everlasting love and protection. Give thanks to the Lord for HE IS GOOD. His mercy endures forever; the Lord is on my side; therefore, I trust in the Lord.

Can anyone think of believing in God without trusting Him? Is it possible to trust in God for the big things like forgiveness and eternal life, and then refuse to trust Him for the little things like clothing and food? (Oswald C. J. Hoffmann, Life Crucified, 1959)

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Tuesday Morning Early Start – The Stain Of Blood

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Tuesday Morning Early Start – Important Doctrines

Now I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse. And He who sat on him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness He judges and makes war. His eyes were like a flame of fire, and on His head were many crowns. He had a name written that no one knew except Himself. He was clothed with a robe dipped in blood, and His name is called The Word of God. And the armies in heaven, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, followed Him on white horses. (Revelation 19:11-14)

The Stain Of Blood

A casual reading of the Law of Moses will impress upon the mind how much blood was shed in the countless sacrifices. The Peace Offerings had blood sprinkled all around the altar, the Sin Offerings had blood sprinkled in front of the veil of the sanctuary, the horns of the altar and at the base. The Priests were constantly “field dressing’ the sacrifices dipping their fingers in the blood and sprinkling it here and there. The Trespass Offering had animals offered up with blood sprinkled on the side of the altar and the rest drained out at the base of the altar. The place of the sin offering was a holy place. It was declared that when blood was sprinkled on any garment it should be washed in a holy place. When Aaron and his sons were consecrated blood was placed on the right ear, the thumb of the right hand and the big toe of their right foot (this was also done for lepers). Blood was also sprinkled on Aaron and his garments.

The Hebrew writer described the many bloody sacrifices in the Law of Moses and how that the first covenant was dedicated with blood. Moses sprinkled blood on the book and the people. The tabernacle and the vessels were clothed in blood. According to the law almost everything was dedicated with blood. Solomon’s dedication of the temple involved the sacrifices of 22,000 bulls and 120,000 sheep. It was not possible to escape the stain of blood. The priest had garments of ministry that no doubt were stained with blood from the multiple sacrifices made each day.

Blood is not easily removed from garments. The stain can be permanent. With all the animals sacrificed daily throughout the year the stains would settle in with no hope of coming clean. Garments, books, vessels, and tents all had blood on them as a constant reminder of the sacrifice required for redemption. Sadly with the untold thousands of animals offered to the Lord through the centuries of man’s existence none of the blood could remove the permanent stain of sin. And then Christ came into the world.

The essential doctrine of redemption can never be understood until the stain of blood is considered. All the blood of the bulls and goats offered under the Law of Moses could not buy back man’s relationship with God. Before the Law of Moses the smoke of a thousand altars from Abel to Abraham could not take away the stain of sin. Man faced a horrible dilemma that he could do nothing about – how do you remove blood. This blood represented the horrible disease of sin and yet this blood was ineffective. Animal blood is not eternal. Man’s blood is eternal. The problem with man’s blood is the stain of sin. And then Christ came into the world.

John’s picture in the Revelation brings the joy of salvation full circle when we see the Lord of Lord and King of Kings riding on a white horse. His robe is dipped in blood and those who follow Him are clothed in fine linen, white and clean, following Him on white horses. What a contrast. The sacrifice of Jesus at Golgotha is when the Son of God poured forth His blood around the altar of sacrifice and sprinkled our hearts with His blood so that we can be clean. Redemption is the cleansing of our lives from the impenetrable stain of sin by the blood of Christ. We are clean. We are forgiven. When we obeyed the gospel of Jesus Christ our sins were WASHED AWAY – removed.

There is power in the blood. Wonder working power. Thank you God for the blood of Your Son that makes possible the cleansing of my sins that will no longer stain but remove sin. The Law of Moses is a pattern to show the depth of blood needed and that only in the blood of Christ can I have redemption. In Jesus Christ we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.

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Monday Morning Coffee Break – The Faith Of A Blind Man

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Monday Morning Coffee Break – Life With Jesus

Now they came to Jericho. As He went out of Jericho with His disciples and a great multitude, blind Bartimaeus, the son of Timaeus, sat by the road begging. And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Then many warned him to be quiet; but he cried out all the more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!” So Jesus stood still and commanded him to be called. Then they called the blind man, saying to him, “Be of good cheer. Rise, He is calling you.” And throwing aside his garment, he rose and came to Jesus. So Jesus answered and said to him, “What do you want Me to do for you?” The blind man said to Him, “Rabboni, that I may receive my sight.” Then Jesus said to him, “Go your way; your faith has made you well.” And immediately he received his sight and followed Jesus on the road. (Mark 10:46-52)

The Faith Of A Blind Man

Jericho is a famous city in the Old Testament as a sign of God’s incredible power. When the children of Israel first came to Canaan the city became the example of how the Lord would impress upon man His wisdom and power. Centuries later the Son of God would be leaving Jericho and once again the city would be the backdrop to a most amazing display of power, grace, mercy and faith.

Being blind in the days of old was a cruel sentence of despair. There was no cure or a hope of a cure. The darkness that prevailed would never be removed and in so many cases those afflicted lived a life of abject poverty by begging. Such was the lot of a blind man called Bartimaeus son of Timaeus. The eyes of Bartimaeus may have been darkened but his heart was filled with light. Whatever background this blind man had with Jesus is unknown but all he knew of Jesus was what he heard. He never saw Jesus. He never saw any miracles of Jesus performed. Yet he had a deep faith in a man only because of what he heard of His power.

As Jesus walked by one day Bartimaeus cried out to the Lord to have mercy on him. The fickle crowd tried to dissuade the blind man to quiet his pleas but this fueled his faith more. Standing still Jesus could not resist the bountiful love of a blind man. Calling for him to come the crowd now encourages the beggar to go to Jesus. It should be noted Jesus could have gone to him but chose rather to stand still and let Bartimaeus come to the Lord. Faith requires our measure of faith to bring us to Christ. The beggar threw aside his garment and went to Jesus. How difficult that must have been for a blind man to make his way through a crowd to find a man he never saw. Helped by others he came before the Lord.

In a most remarkable discourse between a blind man and a healer Jesus asked of Bartimaeus, “What do you want Me to do for you?” At first glance it would seem shockingly obvious what the blind man would desire. Why did Jesus ask this question? Faith is our measure of seeking the Lord with an honest heart of truth. Quickly the beggar pleaded with the Lord to have sight. In an instant the darkness of Bartimaeus’ life disappeared. Light poured into his brain as the eyes soaked in the sights he had not seen. What a moment of transformation for a man who was blind but now can see.

Jesus tells Bartimaeus to go his way but the former blind man choses to follow the only true Way. The first face imprinted on the mind of the blind man was the face of Jesus. He chooses to follow Jesus. There is a sad point to which the story arrives. It is difficult to imagine how incredibly happy Bartimaeus must have been for Jesus to heal him. It was not many days after his miraculous healing the precious eyes of the beggar now beheld His Lord dying on a cross. There would be no weeks, months or years to follow Jesus and talk with Him on the way. Soon after his healing Bartimaeus watched his Savior die.

Nothing else is said of the beggar. It would warm the heart to know that he would become a powerful force in the lives of the early disciples as the church grew. Could he have become a preacher to show the light to those who had eyes to see but were still in darkness? His blindness did not prevent him from seeing Jesus for who He truly was. He was a healer. Jesus took away blindness and gave sight. He still does today. Thank you Bartimaeus. Now I can see.

Faith is obscure. By faith a man moves through darkness; but he moves securely, his hand in the hand of God. He is literally seeing through the eyes of God. (Walter Farrell, The Looking Glass, 1951)

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Sunday Morning Starters – Worship Is Hearing The Word

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Sunday Morning Starters – Worship

The word that came to Jeremiah from the Lord, saying, “Stand in the gate of the Lord’s house, and proclaim there this word, and say, ‘Hear the word of the Lord, all you of Judah who enter in at these gates to worship the Lord!'” (Jeremiah 7:1-2)

Worship Is Hearing The Word

Today is a day of worship where we join together in the fellowship of hearts as the people of God. We lift our voices up to give glory to the Father. The communion of remembrance binds our hearts as one in the sacrifice of Christ. Our assembly is a time of personal encouragement to share our lives with one another in a like precious faith. Worship on the first day of the week is where we can be together to talk about the word of God.

Hearing the word of God is one of the most amazing acts of grace afforded man. Revealed through the written word we have the mind of God expressed to us from the beginning of time. The book we call the Bible is a collation of sixty-six books spanning from Moses telling the oldest story of man to John’s revelation of the future of man. This is not just an ordinary book. Holding in our hand a copy of the Bible is a message that came from the throne of God in Heaven. It is not sacred because it says “Bible” on the outside; it is revered because it is God speaking to us.

In our worship today the Bible will be read and studied. A closed Bible is a closed mind. Jeremiah the prophet was told to instruct the people to “Hear the word of the Lord.” Worship is hearing the word of the Lord and letting its truths blend deeply into every fabric of our lives. When we ‘enter the gates of the Lord’ this morning take the word of God and when the word of the Lord is read open its pages and drink deeply its eternal message of love. Our faith is dependent upon hearing the word of God. As the word goes in our life so goes our faith.

The Bible experienced is God experienced in all the length and breadth and height and depth of His revelation and communication to man. (E. I. Watkin, the Life of the Spirit, February-March, 1954)

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Friday Morning Reflections _ It’s All About Me

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Friday Morning Reflections – Wisdom Literature

A fool takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion. (Proverbs 18:2)

It’s All About Me

There are some folk you have to be careful when you talk of them; you talk of the one whom they love. Self-absorbed people are quick to discuss their superiority or importance with others. Life is filled with the “me syndrome” dotted with the “I’s” of who they are, what they are and where they have been. You have been in a crowd of people where the discussion becomes a jousting match of who can top the other with greater achievements or intellect or prowess or self-believed beauty. It’s a feast of me, me, and more me.

The angels must have a sense of humor because whenever man (made a little lower than the angels) exalts his heart in pride they must be amused. Tiny, puny little men running around a tiny rock three places from the sun think they are the greatest thing in the universe. It might be well to know the earth is not the center of our galaxy and our galaxy is not even in the center of our universe. That is why man becomes a fool when he believes he knows everything rejecting the wisdom of others.

Earlier the wise man reminded man that destruction will follow a man of pride. It is as sure as the law of gravity. When a person becomes haughty in their spirit against others he will only last for so long before crashing into his own demise. Silly isn’t it? Sadly this should never be the spirit of the Christian. It is one thing to look upon those who do not believe that Jesus Christ is Lord and see their pride. When a Christian exhibits this attitude it denies the confession made they believe Jesus is Lord, not them. Our covenant with God the Father is that we have given up all rights to His Son. Our wisdom comes from Him and Him alone. Pride has no place in my life as God’s child because nothing I will ever do can measure up to the wisdom of my Lord nor will I be able to repay the debt I owe him. Christian’s who think more of themselves than others deny the Lord.

Where do church troubles come from? Why do brethren fail to get along so often? What happens when matters become more about ME instead of JESUS CHRIST? Husbands refuse to love their wives because they are filled with themselves. Wives reject the command of God to submit to their husbands because they have no delight in honoring God. Brethren fight and squabble from a spirit of pride that destroys fellowship. Examples of Christians are blighted from those who demand everyone pay attention to them instead of God.

The Christian is a servant. The Christian is a slave. The Christian is a humble person. The Christian is not about ME but about HIM. The Christian owes everything he has and who he is to GOD. Folks, we have nothing to brag about! Because of you and because of me Jesus had to die on the cross and that is nothing to be proud of. Shame on us when we think more of ourselves than what we are. God bless us with hearts of humility of love. Thank you God for giving us something we did not deserve. We can never repay You. Let us dear Lord live not in our own understanding but bathe ourselves with the cleansing power of Your greatest gift.

Of all the marvelous works of the Deity perhaps there is nothing that the angels behold with such supreme astonishment as a proud man. (C. C. Colton, Lacon, 1820)

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Saturday Morning Promises – In The Morning Of Death

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Saturday Morning Promises – Great Stories

And it came to pass on a certain night that the angel of the Lord went out, and killed in the camp of the Assyrians one hundred and eighty-five thousand; and when people arose early in the morning, there were the corpses–all dead. So Sennacherib king of Assyria departed and went away, returned home, and remained at Nineveh. Now it came to pass, as he was worshiping in the temple of Nisroch his god, that his sons Adrammelech and Sharezer struck him down with the sword; and they escaped into the land of Ararat. Then Esarhaddon his son reigned in his place. (2 Kings 19:35-37)

In The Morning Of Death

For centuries war was fought on a large scale of soldiers, machines and weapons. Sisera had 900 chariots of iron, the Philistines had 30,000 chariots and 6,000 horsemen, and people as the sand which is on the seashore in multitude. Solomon had 1400 chariots, 40,000 stalls of horses and 12,000 horsemen. One battle recorded in 1 Kings 20 tells the story of the children of Israel killing 100,000 foot soldiers of the Syrians in one day. Sennacherib came against Jerusalem with an army more than 200,000 strong – to conquer one city.

As Jerusalem lay under seize from the Assyrians, Sennacherib sent his chief of staff Rabshakeh to sue for surrender by the people of the city. Boasting what great things the Assyrians had done to all the lands surrounding Jerusalem Rabshakeh gave assurance to all the people if they would surrender they would be treated fairly and enjoy peace. He reminded the people none of the gods had saved the other conquered people and their god could not save them from the terrible power of the great king of Assyria. The people of Jerusalem were afraid and Hezekiah the king pleaded with the Lord for deliverance. Seeking counsel from Isaiah the word came that Jehovah God would not allow the Assyrians to enter the city and the foreign army would be defeated.

The next day the army of Sennacherib prepared for another uneventful night of besieging Jerusalem. Generals enjoyed their lavish surroundings and the privileges of power. Many soldiers raucously wiled their times away with the pursuits of carnal pleasure. The fires of a thousand camps filled the air with smoke. Life in an army camp was a loud and boisterous experience to dispel the boredom of a siege. The army of Sennacherib was the super power of its day with his army spreading as far as the eye could see. Nothing could stand in its way. Cities cringed in fearful horror at the dread of the Assyrian army. This army was preparing to wipe Jerusalem off the face of the earth.

As the moon settled softly across the western horizon the night turned dark as ebon pinion. Without notice the air grew quiet. While the fires burned to embers the sounds of the camp drew silent. It went without notice. When the sun began to peek over the eastern hills life began to stir within the camp. In the beginning it was a shock as servants tried to awaken their masters but to no avail. Then terror set in. Suddenly the realization came there were a lot of dead soldiers. Had an army crept in during the night and killed these men? As morning dawned brighter the number of dead began to rise until astonished with horror it was reported to Sennacherib 185,000 of his men were dead – in one night – with no apparent reason.  The powerful army of the Assyrian king had been decimated to nothing. The king fled back to his own country where twenty years later he would be assassinated by two of his sons. Jerusalem had not been conquered.

The gods defeated by Sennacherib and boasted of by the Rabshakeh were gods of men. The God of Jerusalem sent His angel to kill 185,000 men in one night. There is no God like Jehovah God and no Lord as mighty as the Lord of Hosts. He still rules in the affairs of men. He is still powerful. He is still majestic. And He is the Lord God that gave His Son to die for you and me so that we could live with Him. We do not fear the angel that took the lives of 185,000 men because we serve the Son who came to give us life. Now that is a great story.

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Thursday Morning Thankfulness – Who Dwells In My Heart

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Thursday Morning Thankfulness – Epistles of Paul

That Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. (Ephesians 3:17)

Who Dwells In My Heart

When Jesus ascending unto the Father following His resurrection it was not His plan to remain there. Throughout His teaching He wanted man to come to learn about Him and live for Him in their lives. The teachings of Jesus are to become an integral part of our lives filling our spiritual hearts with His presence. As in the physical heart where the blood of life sustains us the blood of Christ must flow in our inner man to sustain our spirits. Paul’s prayer exhorts the saints to bring Christ into their lives to dwell.

Jesus sat down at the right hand of God so that He can sit down in the center of our hearts. He wants us to open our hearts for Him to dwell there. This is not a temporary arrangement for an occasional visit. The influence of Jesus must be a constant part of our everyday lives. Our decisions today as we go to work or school must be guided by the principles of Christ. He is not to be a part of our lives only on Sunday and Wednesday night. Dwelling is a constant presence with permanence.

If someone moves in with us we are constantly talking with them and seeing them. They live in our space. There is a daily communion we enjoy with them because the dwell in the same house with us. Spending time with the word of God is where our faith comes and through that faith Christ lives in us. The more we spend in the BOOK the more we feel the presence of the Lord in our hearts. One of the most basic lessons of our faith in Christ is His dwelling in our hearts through faith. The more He fills the rooms of our hearts the less room there is for Satan to find his way in. Dee Bowman said, “It is hard to sin with God on your mind.” With Christ dwelling in your heart you will be able to withstand the wiles of the devil.

Who dwells in your heart? How many rooms of your heart are filled with Jesus Christ? Invite Him in not to visit but to settle down and be a part of your life. When Jesus moves in it must be a permanent arrangement. Invite the Lord into your heart to dwell as the influence in all parts of your life. What a blessing that will be.

Christ is rich, who will maintain you; He is a king, who will provide you; He is a sumptuous entertainer, who will feast you; He is beautiful, who will give in abundance all that can make you happy. (Edmund Campion, Ten Reasons, 1581)

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