| Come Ye Sinners, Poor And Needy |
[Aug. 16th, 2008|04:04 pm] |
Come Ye Sinners, Poor And Needy
Come, ye sinners, poor and needy Weak and wounded, sick and sore Jesus ready, stands to save you Full of pity, love and power
I will arise and go to Jesus He will embrace me in His arms In the arms of my dear Savior, O, there are ten thousand charms
Come, ye thirsty, come and welcome God's free bounty glorify True belief and true repentance Every grace that brings you nigh
Come, ye weary, heavy-laden Lost and ruined by the fall If you tarry 'til you're better You will never come at all
I will arise and go to Jesus He will embrace me in His arms In the arms of my dear Savior, O, there are ten thousand charms
See Him Prostate in the garden On the ground your Maker lies On the bloody tree, behold him Sinner, will this not suffice?"
Lo! the incarnate God ascended Pleads the merit of his blood Venture on him, venture wholly Let no other trust intrude
I will arise and go to Jesus He will embrace me in His arms In the arms of my dear Savior, O, there are ten thousand charms
Words by Joseph Hart, Refrain, source unknown; Music: Traditional American Melody, Walker's Southern Harmony 1835, Public Domain |
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| Vain imagination + giant ego = a sad, sad man |
[Aug. 7th, 2008|09:16 pm] |
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He thought, in his vain imagination, that those seductive women would be interested in someone like him. He had to pretend, anyway.
"He was like a stag caught in a trap, awaiting the arrow that would pierce its heart. He was like a bird flying into a snare, little knowing it would cost him his life." - Proverbs 7:22-23 |
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| Hebrews 6:10 |
[Jul. 22nd, 2008|06:40 am] |
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For God is not unjust so as to forget . . . |
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| Esther |
[Jul. 19th, 2008|09:22 am] |
God doesn't operate in back-handed slaps. When God slaps you, you know it.
When Esther of the Bible (Hadassah) went before the king to share the cause of the people, she knew she could be killed. But she stood before the king, not cowering, not dropping hints and innuendo. She was patient and kind, waiting for the right moment. And because the heart of the king was in God's hand, it was like water.
Esther wasn't rash, wasn't ruled by her emotions but waited on God's timing. |
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| MUNDANE AND MIRACULOUS |
[Jul. 3rd, 2008|12:03 pm] |
First, God's plans are not hindered when the events of this world are carnal or secular. God is at work. He's moving. He's touching lives. He's shaping kingdoms. He's never surprised by what humanity may do. Just because actions or motives happen to be secular or carnal or unfair, it doesn't mean He's not present. Those involved may not be glorifying Him, but never doubt it, He's present. He's at work. Second, God's purposes are not frustrated by moral or marital failures. How do I know that? Because He is a God who applies grace to the long view of life. Wrong grieves Him, and serious consequences follow, but no amount of wrong frustrates His sovereign purposes! He is a God of great grace. Third, God's people are not excluded from high places because of handicap or hardship. Esther was a Jew exiled in a foreign land. She was an orphan. She was light-years removed from Persian nobility. Yet none of that kept God from exalting her to the position in which He wanted her. God's hand is not so short that it cannot save, nor is His ear so heavy that He cannot hear. Whether you see Him or not, He is at work in your life this very moment. God specializes in turning the mundane into the meaningful. God not only moves in unusual ways, He also moves on uneventful days. He is just as involved in the mundane as He is in the miraculous. He is a sovereign God at work amid the vast scenes of state and empires in our world. And we, even in the midst of our usual days, must remain pure and committed to the things of God and His work in our lives, even as we remain sensitive to His hand moving in carnal, secular, even drunken places. Only then can we bring to our broken world the hope it so desperately needs.
Taken from Charles R. Swindoll, Great Days with the Great Lives (Nashville: W Publishing Group, 2005). Copyright © 2005 by Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide. Used by permission |
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| Cardboard Testimonies |
[Jun. 28th, 2008|12:18 pm] |
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| Discord |
[Jun. 18th, 2008|09:32 pm] |
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For wolves to worry the lambs is no wonder, but for one lamb to worry another, this is unnatural and monstrous. --Thomas Brooks |
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| New Work |
[Jun. 17th, 2008|11:34 am] |
Title: Warhorse Series: Revolution Size: 40" x 32" (four 16" x 20" canvases) Medium: Acrylic on canvas Date: 2008 |
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| Co-dependence |
[Jun. 14th, 2008|02:36 pm] |
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well, i've been afraid of changin' 'cause i've built my life around you but time makes you bolder even children get older and i'm getting older too
"Landslide" by Stevie Nicks
I hate to sum up a beautiful song in one word but I think "co-dependence" says it all. |
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| Dishonesty |
[Jun. 12th, 2008|11:29 am] |
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Dishonesty is the father of instability. |
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| The "truth" moment - the courage to stand alone. |
[Jun. 10th, 2008|12:06 pm] |
"In the culture in which we live, there are times when confrontation is necessary. Assimilation is not always the right answer. John McArthur wrote, "Those whom God uses are invariably men and women who swim against the tide. They hold strong convictions with great courage and refuse to compromise in the face of incredible opposition. "David stood alone against Goliath. . . courageously refused the easy path of compromise. Where are the men and women today with the courage to stand alone? "Instead of overturning worldly wisdom with revealed truth, many Christians are obsessed with finding areas of agreement. The goal has become integration, not confrontation. "And as the church absorbs the values of secular culture, it is losing its ability to tell the difference between good and evil." "That's where we are. We don't go out looking for a fight. . . But if you are a Christian, walking with the Lord, standing for Him, you won't have to go looking for a fight, the fight will find you. "And there will be a moment will you will have to decide, "Am I going to stand up for the truth, or am I going be absorbed into the general feeling of how things are today?" "That "truth" moment will come for each of us somewhere along the way. Perhaps it has come for you already." - David Jeremiah
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| Anniversary |
[Jun. 5th, 2008|08:37 am] |
Tomorrow is the anniversary of the end of my marriage and the beginning of my life. I never thought I'd make it a year or make it thru all the loose ends and unanswered questions. But that is how God works. My unanswered questions lead to faith. And faith is trust without analysis or preconditions.
God exiled me and He knows what He is doing. The Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.
"No matter how many years we walk with the Lord, we must still, at times, pass through our own Gethsemane. It happens every time He sends us to the brook to live the hidden life. It happens every time He disorients us as He displaces us; every time He pulls out all the props; every time He takes away more of the comforts; every time He removes most of the "rights" we once enjoyed. And He does all this so that He can mold us into the person that we otherwise never would be. He knows what He's about. "Elijah went to Cherith* as an energetic spokesman for God---a prophet. He emerged from Cherith as a deeper man of God. All this happened because he was left beside a brook that dried up. Alone, but not forgotten. Tested, but not abandoned." - Chuck Swindoll
*1 Kings 17:5-7 (NASB) So he went and did according to the word of the LORD, for he went and lived by the brook Cherith, which is east of the Jordan. The ravens brought him bread and meat in the morning and bread and meat in the evening, and he would drink from the brook. It happened after a while that the brook dried up, because there was no rain in the land. |
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| Scars |
[Jun. 3rd, 2008|07:10 am] |
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Heal the wound but leave the scar, a reminder of how merciful You are. |
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| TOUGH SPOTS |
[Jun. 3rd, 2008|06:44 am] |
June 3, 2008
TOUGH SPOTS by Charles R. Swindoll Read 1 Kings 17:5--7 Elijah was in a tough spot. A life-threatening spot. The brook had dried up. Had God forgotten His faithful servant? Has God forgotten you? Has He left you all alone? The God who gives water can also withhold water. That's His sovereign right. Our human feelings tell us that once our faithful heavenly Father gives water, He should never take it away. It just wouldn't be fair. Once God gives a mate, He should never take a mate. Once God gives a child, He should never take a child. Once He gives a good business, He has no right to take that business. Once He provides a pastor, He must never call him elsewhere. Once He gives us rapid growth and great delight in a ministry, He has no right to step in and say, "Wait a minute. There's no need to grow larger. Let Me take you deeper instead." On the contrary, He has every right! When we hit a tough spot, our tendency is to feel abandoned, to become resentful, to think, How could God forget me? In fact, just the opposite is true. In times of testing, we are more than ever the object of His concern. But God says, in the midst of your dried-up brook, "You are written on the palms of My hands. You are continually before me." Then He uses that wonderful image of a young mother with her new baby, and He surprises us with a realistic reminder: "Can a woman forget her nursing child?" You wouldn't think so, would you? But look at the stories in the news, and you know how many women do exactly that. Babies left in garbage dumpsters. Tiny babies abandoned---sometimes even abused or tortured or murdered. Yes, as unimaginable as it seems, even a mother can forget her nursing child. But here's the clincher: Not God. Not God! He will never forget us. We are permanently inscribed on the palms of His hands. Pause, and let that sink in. Taken from Charles R. Swindoll, Great Days with the Great Lives (Nashville: W Publishing Group, 2005). Copyright © 2005 by Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide. Used by permission.
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| Psalm 55:12-14, 20, 21 |
[Jun. 2nd, 2008|08:29 am] |
It is not an enemy who taunts me— I could bear that. It is not my foes who so arrogantly insult me— I could have hidden from them. Instead, it is you—my equal, my companion and close friend. What good fellowship we once enjoyed as we walked together to the house of God. . . As for my companion, he betrayed his friends; he broke his promises. His words are as smooth as butter, but in his heart is war. His words are as soothing as lotion, but underneath are daggers! |
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[May. 31st, 2008|12:43 pm] |
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| Fold your wings |
[May. 29th, 2008|09:21 am] |
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Fold your wings, you angels, you cannot know the grace I have enjoyed. So when I sing before Almighty God, I sing with the redeemed, not with those who never needed a Savior. |
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| http://fbcjax.com/downloads/WFYT/currentDevotions.pdf |
[May. 26th, 2008|02:23 pm] |
"Don’t be too quick to discount someone’s good qualities because they made a mistake, disappointed you or did something without thinking. You wouldn’t haul your car to the junkyard because it had a faulty battery or a flat tire! Love means risk, but the payoffs outweigh the investment. Life is not built on acquisitions and accomplishments, it’s built on relationships." - WFYT |
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| Cinderella |
[May. 22nd, 2008|01:43 pm] |
 MARIA SUE CHAPMAN, DAUGHTER OF STEVEN CURTIS CHAPMAN, DIES IN ACCIDENT AT FAMILY HOME
NASHVILLE, TN...5/21/08... At approximately 5pm on the afternoon of Wednesday May 21st, Maria Sue Chapman, 5 years old and the youngest daughter to Steven and Mary Beth Chapman was struck in the driveway of the Chapman home in Franklin, TN. Maria was rushed to Vanderbilt Childrens Hospital in Nashville, transported by LifeFlight, but died of her injuries there. Maria is one of the close knit family’s six children and one of their three adopted daughters.
More than five years ago, Chapman and his wife MaryBeth founded The Shaohannah’s Hope Ministry after bringing their first adopted daughter, Shaohannah, home from China. The ministry’s goal is to help families reduce the financial barrier of adoption, and has provided grants to over 1700 families wishing to adopt orphans from around the world.
Cinderella by Stephen Curtis Chapman She spins and she sways to whatever song plays, Without a care in the world. And I'm sittin' here wearin' the weight of the world on my shoulders. It's been a long day and there's still work to do, She's pulling at me saying "Dad I need you! There's a ball at the castle and I've been invited and I need to practice my dancin'" "Oh please, daddy, please!"
So I will dance with Cinderella While she is here in my arms 'Cause I know something the prince never knew Oh I will dance with Cinderella I don't wanna miss even one song, Cuz all to soon the clock will strike midnight And she'll be gone
She says he's a nice guy and I'd be impressed She wants to know if I'd approve of a dress She says "Dad, the prom is just one week away, And I need to practice my dancin'" "Oh please, daddy, please!"
So I will dance with Cinderella While she is here in my arms 'Cause I know something the prince never knew Ohh-oh ohh-oh, I will dance with Cinderella I don't wanna miss even one song, Cuz all to soon the clock will strike midnight And she'll be gone She will be gone.
Well, she came home today With a ring on her hand Just glowin' and tellin' us all they had planned She says "Dad, the wedding's due six months away And I need to practice my dancin'" "Oh please, daddy please!"
So I will dance with Cinderella While she is here in my arms 'Cause I know something the prince never knew Ohh-oh ohh-oh, I will dance with Cinderella I don't wanna miss even one song, (even one song) Cuz all to soon the clock will strike midnight And she'll be gone May the Lord comfort your hearts and especially the sweet heart of your son. |
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| Mother's Day 1962 |
[May. 12th, 2008|09:20 pm] |
 Happy Mother's Day, Mom I love you |
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