Seeking Biblical Discernment

Jun 25, 2008 at 19:36 o\clock

March Forward

Author: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Source: Streams in the Desert
Scripture Reference:
Exodus 14:15 

March Forward

"Speak unto the children of Israel, that they go forward" (Exod. 14:15).

Imagine, O child of God, if you can, that triumphal march! The excited children restrained from ejaculations of wonder by the perpetual hush of their parents; the most uncontrollable excitement of the women as they found themselves suddenly saved from a fate worse than death; while the men followed or accompanied them ashamed or confounded that they had ever mistrusted God or murmured against Moses; and as you see those mighty walls of water piled by the outstretched hand of the Eternal, in response to the faith of a single man, learn what God will do for His own.

Dread not any result of implicit obedience to His command; fear not the angry waters which, in their proud insolence, forbid your progress. Above the voices of many waters, the mighty breakers of the sea, "the Lord sitteth King for ever."

A storm is only as the outskirts of His robe, the symptom of His advent, the environment of His presence.

Dare to trust Him; dare to follow Him! And discover that the very forces which barred your progress and threatened your life, at His bidding become the materials of which an avenue is made to liberty. --F. B. Meyer

Have you come to the Red Sea place in your life,
Where, in spite of all you can do,
There is no way out, there is no
way back,
There is no other way but through?
Then wait on the Lord with a trust serene
Till the night of your fear is gone;
He will send the wind, He will heap the floods,
When He says to your soul, "Go on."

And His hand will lead you through--clear through--
Ere the watery walls roll down,
No foe can reach you, no wave can touch,
No mightiest sea can drown;
The tossing billows may rear their crests,
Their foam at your feet may break,
But over their bed you shall walk dry shod
In the path that your Lord will make.

In the morning watch, 'neath the lifted cloud,
You shall see but the Lord alone,
When He leads you on from the place of the sea
To a land that you have not known;
And your fears shall pass as your foes have passed,
You shall be no more afraid;
You shall sing His praise in a better place,
A place that His hand has made.
--Annie Johnson Flint

 



This classic devotional is the unabridged edition of Streams in the Desert. This first edition was published in 1925 and the wording is preserved as originally written. Connotations of words may have changed over the years and are not meant to be offensive.

Jun 23, 2008 at 20:09 o\clock

Standing Tall

Author: Woodrow Kroll
Source: Early in the Morning 2
Scripture Reference:
Job 1:1-22 

Standing Tall

And it was so, when the days of their feasting were gone about, that Job sent and sanctified them, and rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all: for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually.

The ability to meet affliction with an uncompromising endurance and an unflinching respect for God is one of the marks of true Christian character. Certainly Job is the classic example of a man who met affliction in such a way.

The author begins the book of Job by describing a beautiful pastoral scene in which Job, a respected and honored oriental sheik, or prince, was residing in the land of Uz. Job was a man of extreme wealth, possessing a flock of 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, large tracts of land and an affectionate family of seven sons and three daughters.

But more than this, Job was a man of extreme piety. The first verse of the book describes him as "perfect and upright, and one that feared God, and eschewed evil." So concerned was this man about keeping himself and his family right before his God that he "rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all; for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually" (Job 1:5). Day after day he met God early, bringing sacrifices to the Almighty in the event that he or any of his family had secretly sinned against God.

The rest of this chapter's verses, comprising scene two in the first act of Job's life, read like a horror story. Here Satan entered this beautiful country scene and disrupted the simple pastoral life of Job and his family. Notice these features of scene two.

1. Satan's report (verse 6). The day came when the sons of God, presumably the angels, were to bring a report of their activities to Jehovah. Satan also came among them.

2. Satan's activity (verse 7). When Jehovah asked Satan why he had come and from where he had come, Lucifer answered the Lord, "From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it." Satan's activity was a never-ending search for opportunities to disrupt the program of God.

3. Satan's problem (verse 8). It was Jehovah who suggested to Satan, "Hast thou considered My servant Job?" Here Satan would encounter a man who was perfect and upright, one who hated every kind of evil that Satan had placed in his path.

4. Satan's accusation (verses 10-11). The devil had a ready answer for why Job had remained upright. God had put a hedge around him so that everything Job did prospered. Surely if God would remove that hedge, Satan reasoned, Job certainly would curse God to His face.

5. Satan's restriction (verse 12). Jehovah permitted Lucifer to touch all that Job possessed but placed one restriction upon him, "Only upon himself put not forth shine hand." Although God does not always make this temporal restriction with regard to us today, he certainly makes it an eternal restriction.

6. Satan's attacks (verses 13-19). The devil came to menace Job. Like waves of enemy soldiers the reports kept coming to Job until he learned that he had lost all.

7. Satan's failure (verses 20-22). Job arose and reacted with characteristic remorse. And yet, rather than sin and foolishly charge God, Job stood tall and simply stated, "Naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the LORD gave and the LORD hath taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD" (Job 1:21).

Do not be discouraged when you face the attacks of the wicked one. These attacks are only temporal, and our loving God will have the final word. You may not always understand the ways of God, but you must always trust them, as did Job.

MORNING HYMN
Why should I feel discouraged,
Why should the shadows come,
Why should my heart be lonely
And long for Heav'n and home,
When Jesus is my portion?
My constant Friend is He;
His eye is on the sparrow,
And I know He watches me.

Jun 18, 2008 at 23:39 o\clock

Conversion story

How I Went From Being An Atheist-Evolutionist To Religious Hypocrite To True Christian Convert. by Kevin Williams

How I Went From Being An Atheist-Evolutionist To Religious Hypocrite To True Christian Convert.

I used to be an atheist-evolutionist and then I read www.discovery.org/articleFiles/PDFs/survivalOfTheFakest.pdf which showed everything I'd been taught as 'proof' for evolution to be fake or misleading. I of course looked for atheist rebuttals, but all they could do was very poorly attempt to explain away and name call. The more I looked, the more ridiculous evolution became. One Small Speck to Man www.OneSmallSpeck.com dismantles every single evolutionary argument.

I first looked at the Bible as a history book. I was impressed with statements like this from Nelson Glueck renowned archaeologist: "It may be stated categorically that no archaeological discovery has ever controverted [disproved] a biblical reference."

I read about Archaeologist Sir William Ramsay who was a sceptic, who especially attacked Luke and went out to disprove the Bible from an historical standpoint. And this is what he concluded regarding Luke: "Luke's history is unsurpassed in respect of its trustworthiness" and that "Luke is a historian of the first rank ... In short, this author should be placed along with the very greatest of historians."

I was also impressed with the many, many scientific forsights in the Bible, than couldn't have naturally been known by the writers of those times other than special revelation, like Job 38:16 tells us about the springs of the sea (like the fast 'fish lanes' in Finding Nemo) these weren't discovered until 1977. http://www.evidencebible.com/witnessingtool/scientificfactsintheBible.shtml & http://www.evidencebible.com/witnessingtool/scienceconfirmsthebible.shtml

But what impressed me most of all was so many detailed and accurate Bible prophecies predicting the future far in advance.

Psalm 22 is a long & detailed prophecy of Jesus on the cross, and v16 says "They pierced My hands and My feet" David the writer had no idea what crucifixion was, as this was written 1000BC, and any form of crucifixion wasn't even invented for another 400 years in 600BC, and then it was only hands.

And Isaiah 53 (starts 52 v13) is another incredibly descriptive prophecy of the Messiah on the cross.

14 "His visage was marred more than any man,"

53: 3 "He is despised and rejected by men,"

6 "All we like sheep have gone astray; We have turned, every one, to his own way;
And the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all."

And Verse 5 "But He was pierced for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; The chastisement for our peace was upon Him,

And by His stripes we are healed. "

The Hebrew word Chaburaw translated here as stripes is literally "blows that cut in"

Before Jesus was crucified the Roman's scourged Him with the dreaded flagellum, the cat of 9 tails whip, which was a whip of 9 leather strands with pieces of sharp metal and bone, attached to it, and would literally rip chunks out of the victim. Roman historians record you could literally see their internal organs. But Jesus did all that for me. And that shows how much a Holy God is angry at our sin

And the Prophecy of Daniel 9, written 600 BC, predicts the very day that Jesus would ride into Jerusalem claiming to be the Messiah and be executed without taking His Kingdom yet, and cut a New Covenant.

Now this prophecy was so accurate that sceptics used to claim that the Book of Daniel must have been written after Christ. This was despite that the Book of Daniel was in the Septuagint, which is the Greek translation of the Old Testament translated about 250 BC. So according the sceptics strange logic, the book of Daniel was translated into Greek over 300 years before it was even written. But then in the Dead Sea Scrolls a 200 BC copy of the Book of Daniel was found. Proving that this incredibly accurate prophecy was written hundreds of years before Christ.

It was clear that the Bible is not just a normal book. There is also the amazing manuscript evidence. The New Testament was written between A.D. 40 and A.D. 100. the oldest manuscript we have dates the last quarter of the 1st century and the 2nd oldest A.D. 125. So there's a narrow gap between the original writings and the earliest manuscripts and there's also a narrow gap, between the time of the events actually occurring and people writing them down.

We have some 5,300 early Greek New Testament manuscripts and altogether, including Syriac, Latin, Coptic, and Aramaic, translations we have a whopping 24,633 texts of the ancient New Testament confirming that the text has not been altered in meaning. Compare this to other literature of that time: The oldest copies we have of Julius Caesar's writings are from 1000 years after he died. And we only have 10 copies.

We only have 49 copies of Aristotle's Ode to Poetics and the earliest copy we have is from 1400 years after he wrote it. There are only seven extant manuscripts of Plato's Tetralogies, and the earliest copies are 1200 years after he wrote them. And nobody ever questions these.

What struck me is, the events of the New Testament were written very close to the time they actually happened and our earliest copies are close to the time of the originals.

Now the inbuilt proof of prophecy was enough evidence alone, but there's also The fact that Jesus rose from the dead which is testified in sources outside of the Bible, and over 500 Christians saw the risen Jesus, But if these Christians had made it all up they had nothing to gain and everything to lose including their lives, unless it was all true, because they went to torturous deaths proclaiming that Jesus is reason.

Then I realized that Jesus was claiming to be God, in John 8:58 Jesus takes for Himself the divine Name of God "the I AM" and the Jews knew exactly what He meant as in the next verse they try to stone Him.

In John 20:28 Thomas called Jesus "my Lord and my God." Jesus accepted this worship and blessed him.

As a side note; one of the cults who knocked on my door the other day, tried to claim that Jesus said He wasn't God because in Mark 10:18 Jesus said to the Rich young ruler "Why do you call me good. God alone is good". To which I replied "Is God alone good?" Answer "Yes." Next question "was Jesus good?" Answer "Yes", He was without sin, and He Himself said "I am the Good Shepherd" The Good Shepherd also being a name for God.

As C.S. Lewis pointed out someone who claims to be God and the only way to Heaven either is God and the only way to Heaven, or a liar or a lunatic, but cannot just be a good moral teacher like many people illogically perceive Jesus to be. And Jesus certainly wasn't a liar or a lunatic.

A promise is only as good as the promise maker, and because God's past promises had come to pass in great accuracy and detail, I know I can be certain that His future promises about Heaven and Hell will also come to pass.

But for a long time, like so many in the church I was still not a Christian, because I only believed it intellectually and had never truly repented and put my faith in the Saviour. I was a religious hypocrite. Religious for 90 minutes on a Sunday, and then acted like the unconverted world for the rest of the week. This video explains True & False Conversion http://www.livingwaters.com/listenwatch/stream_truefalse_broadband.asx

When I compared myself to others, I used to think I was a pretty good person, and so I thought 'of course God would let me into Heaven'. How wrong I was, it's not "my" standard that we will all be judged by on the Day God has appointed to judge the world in Righteousness, but by God perfect law the Ten Commandments, and it really helped me looking at myself in the mirror of the Ten Commandments.

I'd lied, and just as it only takes one murder to be a murderer, (of course I'd not only lied once) I was a liar and "All liars will have their part in the Lake of Fire" Rev 21:8

I'd stolen, and whilst I may not have robbed a bank, I'd watched copied DVDs, took extra breaks, and whether someone stole £1 or £20 from your pocket, you'd call them a thief. And "no thief will enter Heaven" 1 Cor 6:9

I was also guilty of breaking the 2nd Commandment "You shall not make an idol" now of course I didn't bow down to a wooden idol I'd made, but what I'd done is carve a false image of God in my mind, one that was corrupt and wouldn't punish me for my sin. Of course it doesn't matter what we "imagine" God to be like, it is what He is really like that's important.

Hell makes perfect sense, our conscience demands the guilty are punished. When a judge lets a child-killer go free we say he's corrupt and scream injustice. Every year thousands of murderers and rapist are never brought to justice. Hitler was never brought to justice in a human court. It makes sense that if God is good He must punish murderers and rapist, but because God is infinitely good, He demands infinite Justice and will punish all sin wherever it's found. He'll punish, liars, thieves, blasphemers, adulterers, fornicators (people who have sex outside of marriage).

I'd also taken the Lord's Name in vain. I'd used the Name of the One who gave me my life and everything good, in place of a filth word to express disgust. And "The Lord will not hold Him guiltless who takes His Name in vain" and "for every idle word a man speaks he will give an account on the Day of judgement" Matt 12:36

I'd lusted, which God sees as adultery of the heart Mat 5:27 "God desires truth from our hearts" Psa 51 and so He will even judge our thought life. Imagine having your thought life being played on National TV. "Everything done in darkness will be made known" If your thought life was shown on National TV, how many people would be angry at you? But what would your reaction be against someone else with a similar thought life? Would your reaction be to suffer and die for them on a cross to pay the penalty for their sins. That's what Jesus did for all those who truly turn to Him.

Despite my sin against God, He made a way for me to be saved "from the wrath that is to come". 2000 years ago, in fulfilment with prophecy, God became a man in Christ Jesus, was born of a virgin, led a sinless life and then suffered and died hanging on a cross to pay the fine for all the sins of all those who will repent and trust in Jesus to save them. And then on the third Day He rose again. "He is risen" "By His stripes we are healed" "He was bruised for our iniquities" "The chastisement for our peace was upon Him" that is "a love that passes all understanding"

To be forgiven and made right with God, (and this is the important bit that changed me from a religious hypocrite to a true Christian). You have to repent, that is to look at yourself in the light of God's Law, realize and be heartfully sorry that you've sinned against God, then turn fully away from your sins, forsaking them and turning fully to God, no longer trusting in your own "good works" to save you, but instead fully trusting in Jesus "finished" work on the cross, like you'd trust in a parachute. It's no good just believing that a parachute exists and has the ability to save you as you jump out of a plane, you have to put it on, and in the same way the Bible says you have to "put on the Lord Jesus Christ." And the moment you do that, you'll pass from death to life, the Bible says you're are a "New Creation" forgiven and made right with God. God will grant you everlasting life and give you a new heart and new desires to seek the things of God and hate the sins you once loved.

You could die at any moment. Eternity is a long time to be wrong.

Some good links www.NeedGod.com

www.myspace.com/KevWilliamsMusic many videos and audio resources.

The Bible Stands Alone: http://www.evidencebible.com/witnessingtool/Biblestandsalone.shtml

http://www.puritanfellowship.com/2007/09/how-i-went-from-being-atheist.html

Jun 7, 2008 at 18:44 o\clock

More A.W. Tozer quotes

Christianity is so entangled with the world that millions never guess how radically they have missed the New Testament pattern. Compromise is everywhere.

Keep your feet on the ground, but let your heart soar as high as it will. Refuse to be average or to surrender to the chill of your spiritual environment.

Perhaps our greatest present need may be the coming of a prophet to dash the stones at the foot of the mountain and call the Church out to repentance or to judgment.

For a man to understand revealed truth requires an act of God equal to the original act which inspired the text.

We need to learn that truth consists not in correct doctrine, but in correct doctrine plus the inward enlightenment of the Holy Spirit.

Men who have been used of God in any generation from Calvary down to this hour have not invented and preached new truths. They have simply had the anointed vision to discover truths that had been obscured by the overemphasis of certain other truths.

The church has lost her testimony. She has no longer anything to say to the world. Her once robust shout of assurance has faded away to an apologetic whisper. She who one time went out to declare now goes out to inquire. Her dogmatic declaration has become a respectful suggestion, a word of religious advice, given with the understanding that it is after all only an opinion and not meant to sound bigoted.

Pure Christianity, instead of being shaped by its environment, actually stands in sharp opposition to it.

Could it be that too many of God's true children, and especially the preachers, are sinning against God by guilty silence?...I for one am waiting to hear the loud voices of the prophets and reformers sounding once more over a sluggish and drowsy church. They'll pay a price for their boldness, but the results will be worth it.

To be right with God has often meant to be in trouble with men. This is such a common truth that one hesitates to mention it, yet it appears to have been overlooked by the majority of Christians today.

Apart from God nothing matters. We think that health matters, that freedom matters, or knowledge or art or civilization. And but for one insistent word they would matter indeed. That word is eternity.

We are in real need of a reformation that will lead to revival among the churches.

The man who has been taught by the Holy Spirit will be a seer rather than a scholar. The difference is that the scholar sees and the seer sees through; and that is a mighty difference indeed.

The apostles went to jail, and that is not too revealing because they went against their will; but when they got out of jail and could go where they would they immediately went to the praying company. The choices of life, not the compulsions, reveal character.

Moral power has always accompanied definitive beliefs. Great saints have always been dogmatic. We need right now a return to a gentle dogmatism that smiles while it stands stubborn and firm on the Word of God that liveth and abideth forever.

The unsatisfied longings of the prophets for human understanding caused them to cry out in their complaint, and even our Lord Himself suffered in the same way. The man who has passed on into the divine Presence in actual inner experience will not find many who understand him.

I believe that the imperative need of the day is not simply revival, but a radical reformation that will go to the root of our moral and spiritual maladies and deal with causes rather than with consequences, with the disease rather than with symptoms.

When the children of God accept the world's values it is time some Christians spoke up. Babylon may have her gods, her own way of life and moral standards. It is when Israel begins to adopt them that the prophet of God becomes responsible to rise and cry out against them.

Truth consists not merely in correct doctrine but in correct doctrine to which is added the inward enlightenment of the Holy Spirit...John the Baptist said, "A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven" (John 3:27). He was not referring to men's gifts. He was speaking of spiritual truth.

The radical element in testimony and life that once made Christians hated by the world is missing from present-day evangelicalism.

It is useless for large companies of believers to spend long hours begging God to send revival. Unless we intend to reform we may as well not pray. Unless praying men have the insight and faith to amend their whole way of life to conform to the New Testament pattern there can be no true revival.

The fact is that we are not today producing saints. We are making converts to an effete type of Christianity that bears little resemblance to that of the New Testament. The average so-called Bible Christian in our times is but a wretched parody on true sainthood. Yet we put millions of dollars behind movements to perpetuate this degenerate form of religion and attack the man who dares to challenge the wisdom of it.

And when the deliverers come---reformers, revivalists, prophets---they will be men of God and men of courage. They will have God on their side because they will be careful to stay on God's side. They will be co-workers with Christ and instruments in the hand of the Holy Ghost. Such men will be baptized with the Spirit indeed...

Our only hope is that renewed spiritual pressure will be exerted increasingly by self-effacing and courageous men who desire nothing but the glory of God and the purity of the church. May God send us many of them.

Today we need prophetic preachers; not preachers of prophecy merely, but preachers with a gift of prophecy. The word of wisdom is missing. We need the gift of discernment again in our pulpits.

What is needed desperately today is prophetic insight. Scholars can interpret the past; it takes prophets to interpret the present.

Any spirit that permits compromise with the world is a false spirit. Any religious movement that imitates the world in any of its manifestations is false to the cross of Christ and on the side of the devil.

The popular notion that the first obligation of the church is to spread the gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth is false. Her first obligation is to be spiritually worthy of it.

Some who desire to be teachers of the Word, but who understand neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm, insist upon "naked" faith as the only way to know spiritual things. By this they mean a conviction of the trustworthiness of the Word of God (a conviction, it may be noted, which the devils share with them). But the man who has been taught even slightly by the Spirit of Truth will rebel at this perversion. His language will be, "I have heard Him and observed Him. What have I to do any more with idols?" For he cannot love a God who is no more than a deduction from a text.

The man who preaches truth and applies it to the lives of his hearers will feel the nails and the thorns. He will lead a hard life, but a glorious one. May God raise up many such prophets. The church needs them badly.

The truly spiritual man is indeed something of an oddity. He lives not for himself but to promote the interests of Another...He finds few who care to talk about that which is the supreme object of his interest, so he is often silent and preoccupied in the midst of noisy religious shoptalk. For this he earns the reputation of being dull and over-serious, so he is avoided and the gulf between him and society widens.

 

Jun 5, 2008 at 23:17 o\clock

Discipleship quotes

Discipleship Quotes

Christianity without discipleship is always Christianity without Christ. --Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Take the words of Jesus and let them become the Supreme Court of the Gospel to you. –John G. Lake

Some wish to hear the word of God, others wish to receive it.--Anonymous

Understanding is the reward of obedience. Obedience is the key to every door. –George MacDonald

In the spiritual life only one thing produces genuine joy and that is obedience. --Richard Foster

The level of our obedience is most often determined by the behavior standard of other Christians around us. --Jerry Bridges

Many Christians have what we might call a "cultural holiness". They adapt to the character and behavior pattern of Christians around them. As the Christian culture around them is more or less holy, so these Christians are more or less holy. But God has not called us to be like those around us. He has called us to be like himself. Holiness is nothing less than conformity to the character of God. --Jerry Bridges

Holiness has never been the driving force of the majority. It is, however, mandatory for anyone who wants to enter the kingdom. --Elisabeth Elliot

The reason for not going out and sinning all you like is the same as the reason for not going out and putting your nose in a slicing machine: its dumb, stupid, and no fun. Some individual sins may have pleasure still
attached to them because of the residual goodness of the realities they are abusing: adultery can indeed be pleasant and tying one on can amuse. But betrayal, jealousy, love grown cold, and the gray dawn of the morning after are nobody's idea of a good time. --Robert Farrer Capon

The dullness that overshadows a passive person is increased by the mounting number of times one doesn’t respond to the promptings of God. --Greg Manalli

Whatsoever one would understand what he hears must hasten to put into practice what he has heard. --Gregory the Great

I know the power obedience has of making things easy which seem impossible. --Teresa of Avila

Let this be thy whole endeavor, this thy prayer, this thy desire,--that thou mayest be stripped of all selfishness, and with entire simplicity follow Jesus only. --Thomas à Kempis

No man has the mind of Christ, except him who makes it his business to obey him.—George MacDonald

One can believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ and feel no personal loyalty to Him at all - indeed, pay no attention whatever to His commandments and His will for one's life. --Catherine Marshall

I defy you to read the life of any saint that has ever adorned the life of the Church without seeing at once that the greatest characteristic in the life of that saint was discipline and order. Invariably it is the universal characteristic of all the outstanding men and women of God.—Unknown

Habits are to the soul what the veins and arteries are to the blood, the courses in which it moves. --Horace Bushnell

Men do not decide their future. They decide their habits and their habits decide their future.—Unknown

Plant a word in the mind, and you will reap an act. Plant the act and you will reap a habit. Plant a habit and you will reap a character. Plant a character and you will reap a nature. Plant a nature and you will reap a destiny. --Unknown

The strength of a man's virtue should not be measured by his special exertions, but by his habitual acts.--Blaise Pascal

He who is faithful in little will be faithful in much. --Jesus Christ

If Christ does not reign over the mundane events in our lives, He does not reign at all. --Paul Tripp

Self-respect is the root of discipline: The sense of dignity grows with the ability to say no to oneself. –Abraham Joshua Heschel

Maturity doesn't come with age; it comes with acceptance of responsibility. --Ed Cole

To be converted to faith in Jesus Christ is to return to the worship of the true God, and to dethrone all rivals to his authority. --Graham Kendrick

We must assess our thoughts and beliefs and reckon whether they are moving us closer to conformity to Christ or farther away from it. --John Ortberg

Jesus tapped me on the shoulder and said, Bob, why are you resisting me? I said, I'm not resisting you! He said, You gonna follow me? I said, I've never thought about that before! He said, When you're not following me, you're resisting me. --Bob Dylan

There is no peace in the border lands. The halfway Christian is a torment to himself and of no benefit to others. --Earnest Worker

The characteristic of holiness, which is the outcome of the indwelling of God, is blazing truthfulness with regard to God's word and an amazing tenderness in personal dealings. --Oswald Chambers

Christianity does not consist in any partial amendment of our lives, any particular moral virtues, but in an entire change of our natural temper, a life wholly devoted to God. --William Law

Those who teach by their doctrine must teach by their life, or else they pull down with one hand what they build up with the other. --Matthew Henry

...Christ did not appoint professors, but followers. If Christianity ... is not reduplicated in the life of the person expounding it, then he does not expound Christianity, for Christianity is a message about living and can only be expounded by being realized in men's lives. --Soren Kierkegaard

A holy life has a voice. It speaks when the tongue is silent, and is either a constant attraction or a perpetual reproof. --Hinton

Preaching is to much avail, but practice is far more effective. A godly life is the strongest argument you can offer the skeptic. --Hosea Ballou

Sometimes we don't need another chance to express how we feel or to ask someone to understand our situation. Sometimes we just need a firm kick in the pants. An unsmiling expectation that if we mean all these wonderful things we talk about and sing about, then lets see something to prove it. --Dietrich Bonhoeffer

No one can sum up all God is able to accomplish through one solitary life, wholly yielded, adjusted, and obedient to Him. --D.L.Moody

I surrendered unto Him all there was of me; everything! Then for the first time I realized what it meant to have real power. --Kathryn Kuhlman

I dare not say with Paul that I am the slave of Christ, but my highest aspiration and desire is to be the slave of Christ. –George MacDonald

Nothing is really lost by a life of sacrifice; everything is lost by failure to obey God's call. --Henry P Liddon

Nothing disciplines the inordinate desires of the flesh like service, and nothing transforms the desires of the flesh like serving in hiddenness. The flesh whines against service but it screams against hidden service. It strains and pulls for honor and recognition. --Richard Foster

Today, even amongst Christians, there can be found much of that spirit that wants to give as little as possible to the Lord, and yet to get as much as possible from Him. The prevailing thought today is of being used, as though that were the one thing that mattered. That my little rubber band should be stretched to the very limit seems all important. But this is not the Lord's mind. The Lord wants us to be used, yes; but what He is after is that we pour all we have, ourselves, to Him, and if that be all, that is enough. --Watchman Nee

The decision to grow always involves a choice between risk and comfort. This means that to be a follower of Jesus you must renounce comfort as the ultimate value of your life. --John Ortberg

The Christian ideal has not been found tried and found wanting, it has been found difficult and left untried. -- GK Chesterton

If thou art willing to suffer no adversity, how wilt thou be the friend of Christ? --Thomas à Kempis

There is no success without sacrifice. If you succeed without sacrifice it is because someone has suffered before you. If you sacrifice without success it is because someone will succeed after. --Rick Joyner

The Bible parable says that while men slept, the enemy sowed tares among the wheat. A boy who rises at 4:30 to deliver papers is considered a go-getter, but to urge our young people to rise at 5:30 to pray is considered fanaticism. We must once again wear the harness of discipline. There is no other way. --Leonard Ravenhill

To be rooted is perhaps the most important and least recognized need of the human soul. --Simone Weil

Knowing that we are fulfilling God's purpose is the only thing that really gives rest to the restless human heart. --Chuck Colson

The invitation is not, “Give Me thine head.” The invitation is, “My Son, give Me thine heart.” –John G. Lake

At the back of it there lies the central citadel of obstinacy: I will not give up my right to myself--the thing God intends you to give up if ever you are going to be a disciple of Jesus Christ.--Oswald Chambers

Whatever God's dream about man may be, it seems certain it cannot come true unless man cooperates. --Stella Terrill Mann

... I gave as an offering my all to Him Who had won me and saved me, my property, my fame, my health, my very words... In considering all these things, I preferred Christ. And the words of God were made sweet as honeycombs to me, and I cried after knowledge and lifted up my voice for wisdom. There was moreover the moderation of anger, the curbing of the tongue, the restraint of the eyes, the discipline of the belly, and the trampling under foot of the glory which clings to the earth. --Gregory of Nazianzus

Let no one imagine that he will lose anything of human dignity by this voluntary sell-out of his all to his God. He does not by this degrade himself as a man; rather he finds his right place of high honor as one made in the image of his Creator. His deep disgrace lay in his moral derangement, his unnatural usurpation of the place of God. His honor will be proved by restoring again that stolen throne. In exalting God over all, he finds his own highest honor upheld. --A.W Tozer

It is the Father's life, and the Father's life alone, that ever lives the Christian life. It is the Father's life, and Father's life alone, which will live the Christian life in you. Embrace a formula or a list in order to "live the Christian life," and you are doomed to frustration. --Gene Edwards

Do not scrutinize so closely whether you are doing much or little, ill or well, so long as what you do is not sinful and that you are heartily seeking to do everything for God. Try as far as you can to do everything well, but when it is done, do not think about it. Try, rather, to think of what is to be done next. Go on simply in the Lord's way, and do not torment yourself. We ought to hate our faults, but with a quiet, calm hatred; not pettishly and anxiously. --Francis de Sales

If you have not chosen the Kingdom of God first, it will in the end make no difference what you have chosen instead. --William Law

Until you have given up your self to Him you will not have a real self... –C.S. Lewis

It is only by a total death to self we can be lost in God. --Jeanne Guyon

All we have—ourselves--to Him, and if that be all, that is enough. --Watchman Nee

Jun 2, 2008 at 20:15 o\clock

Come and Dine

Author: Woodrow Kroll
Source: Early in the Morning 2
Scripture Reference:
John 21:1-25 

Come and Dine

But when the morning was now come, Jesus stood on the shore: but the disciples knew not that it was Jesus.

Have you ever noticed that the most difficult time to serve the Lord is immediately after a defeat in your life? When we are on a spiritual high, serving the Lord comes almost naturally. But when we experience the roller-coaster ride to the depths of despair after some spiritual tragedy, we have a tendency to become complacent. While activity tends to produce additional activity, inactivity also reproduces itself.

The popularity of Jesus Christ had been building throughout His earthly ministry. Thousands of people followed Him through the hills of Galilee, watching His miracles and listening to His teachings. The disciples had become an intimate group, well known for their association with Jesus. As His popularity grew, so did their own.

The culmination of their intimate relationship with the Lord came the night of His betrayal. He had gathered the disciples in the upper room to keep the Passover. They were all there. They ate with the Lord, prayed with Him, sang hymns with Him, pledged their loyalty to Him. Around this meal, the institution of the Lord's supper, the disciples reached a spiritual high. Their heightened spirits, however, were soon to be dashed. Jesus was led away from the garden, He endured a cruel and illegal trial, and the disciples were dispersed. Even though Jesus again and again had told them that He must suffer the cruelty of the cross, the disciples still did not assimilate this tenet of His teaching. With His death and burial the disciples' balloon had burst. Even the resurrection of the Lord and the immediate post-resurrection appearances did not do much to reassure the disciples.

As instructed by the Lord Himself, the disciples returned to Galilee. Their meeting with Jesus on the mountain of Galilee, where He had appointed them, must have been subsequent to the account of our Scripture for today. Seven of the apostles had returned to their vocation as fishermen. How easy it was to be a follower of the Lord when He was present; how easy it was to return to their occupation in His absence.

It was Peter who first suggested that he would go fishing. This does not necessarily imply that he intended to renounce his apostleship in favor of the fishing trade. This is what he knew best; this is what he would do until the Lord commanded him otherwise. Hence Peter and the others entered into a ship and fished all night, but caught nothing. How could this be? Had they lost the knack of fishing during their years with the Messiah? Why were they so unsuccessful at a business in which they had been extremely successful before Jesus called them to discipleship? Throughout the night they fished without any success at all.

"But when the morning was now come, Jesus stood on the shore" (John 21:4). For some providential reason the disciples did not recognize the stranger standing on the shore. As He called to them and inquired how successful they had been, they had to answer that they were extremely unsuccessful in fishing that night. It was the resurrected Lord, keeping His rendezvous with them in Galilee. But they did not recognize this until He commanded them to cast their nets on the other side of the ship. This was reminiscent of a similar but earlier command of the Lord with the same result (Luke 5:1-11).

When the disciples had hauled in an incredible number of fish, they came to the shore at Jesus' invitation to "Come and dine" (John 21:12). It was almost as if the Lord was reigniting the fire of intimacy and love that had cooled since their last supper together. Jesus Christ did not want His disciple band to become complacent, for complacency is kin to disobedience.

After we have once served the Lord well and lived in intimate relationship with Him, it is easy to become complacent, to drift from Him and not to sit at His table. However, the Lord calls to each of us to "come and dine"; and if we are to be an effective and useful tool in the Master's hand, we must find our feet under His table frequently.

MORNING HYMN
Revive us again fill each heart with Thy love;
May each soul be rekindled with fire from above.
Hallelujah, Thine the glory! Hallelujah, amen!
Hallelujah, Thine the glory! Revive us again.