29 November 2022
The LORD Among Us
28 November 2022
Faith and Freedom From Fear
26 November 2022
Bless the LORD Who Heals
24 November 2022
Offer a Sacrifice of Thanksgiving
22 November 2022
Faith to Go or Remain
21 November 2022
Keep Believing in God
20 November 2022
Our Hope In KING Jesus
17 November 2022
God's Ways are Truth and Judgment
15 November 2022
Keep Praying and Don't Lose Heart
"I believe that real faith can afford to wait. God's grace often operates through natural events. If you want an ear of corn, plant a grain of corn and wait. Cultivate it and watch it grow. "For the earth yields crops by itself: first the blade, then the head, after that the full grain in the head" (Mark 4:28). That's the way God works. God does not work with slot machines.
I am on a lonely one-man crusade against slot-machine religion. Put a nickel in the slot and get anything you want. That's the way people work, but that is not the way God works.
If God's wants chickens, He makes the old hen sit patiently for twenty-one days until an egg hatches. I used to pity hens, having to wait all that time. With some birds, it's twenty-eight days, and with others it's even longer. If God wants an oak tree, it takes Him twenty years to grow it. If He wants wheat, it takes all winter and up to July of the next year. The God of nature is also the God of grace. Therefore, I think we ought not to rush heaven when we pray. We ought to pray in the will of God and then watch God work slowly.
I have asked God for things and almost gotten discouraged, and then finally saw them begin to happen. Americans have brass knockers, and they knock three times and want to go right in. The kingdom of heaven can wait, and you can wait, and I can wait. Let us trust God and be patient. Some people in the Old Testament--even in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews, the Westminster Abbey of the Bible--died before their prayers were answered." (Tozer, A. W., and James L. Snyder. Going Higher with God in Prayer: Cultivating a Lifelong Dialogue. Bethany House Publishers, a Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2022. page 99)
14 November 2022
God Brings Us Through
12 November 2022
Trusting God with Little Things
11 November 2022
God's Revelation Is For Us
09 November 2022
Be Strengthened in God
08 November 2022
The Quiet and Peaceable Life
07 November 2022
The Hidden Cost of Milk and Sin
05 November 2022
Examine Yourself and Receive
04 November 2022
Our Moments Kept for God
"In things spiritual, the greater does not always include the less, but, paradoxically, the less more often includes the greater. So in this case, time is entrusted to us to be traded with for our Lord. But we cannot grasp it as a whole. We instinctively break it up ere we can deal with it for any purpose. So when a New Year comes round, we commit it with special earnestness to the Lord. But as we do so, are we not conscious of a feeling that even a year is too much for us to deal with? And does not this feeling, that we are dealing with a larger thing than we can grasp, take away from the sense of reality? Thus we are brought to a more manageable measure; and as the Sunday mornings or the Monday mornings come round, we thankfully commit the opening week to Him, and the sense of help and rest is renewed and strengthened. But not even the six or seven days are close enough to our hand; even tomorrow exceeds our tiny grasp, and even tomorrow's grace is therefore not given to us. So we find the need of considering our lives as a matter of day by day, and that any more general committal and consecration of our time does not meet the case so truly...
We do not realise the importance of moments. Only let us consider these two sayings of God about them, 'In a moment shall they die,' and, 'We shall all be changed in a moment,' and we shall think less lightly of them. Eternal issues may hang upon any one of them, but it has come and gone before we can even think about it. Nothing seems less within the possibility of our own keeping, yet nothing is more inclusive of all other keeping. Therefore let us ask Him to keep them for us.
Are they not the tiny joints in the harness through which the darts of temptation pierce us? Only give us time, we think, and we should not be overcome. Only give us time and we could pray and resist, and the devil would flee from us! But he comes all in a moment; and in a moment--an unguarded, unkept one--we utter the hasty or exaggerated word, or think the un-Christ-like thought, or feel the un-Christ-like impatience or resentment...
But the sanctified and Christ-loving heart cannot be satisfied with only negative keeping. We do not want only to be kept from displeasing Him, but to be kept always pleasing Him. Every 'kept from' should have its corresponding and still more blessed 'kept for.' We do not want our moments to be simply kept from Satan's use, but kept for His use; we want them to be not only kept from sin, but kept for His praise...
The same thing is going on every day. It is generally a moment--either an opening or a culminating one--that really does the work. It is not so often a whole sermon as a single short sentence in it that wings God's arrow to a heart. It is seldom a whole conversation that is the means of bringing about the desired result, but some sudden turn of thought or word, which comes with the electric touch of God's power. Sometimes it is less than that; only a look (and what is more momentary?) has been used by Him for the pulling down of strongholds. Again, in our own quiet waiting upon God, as moment after moment glides past in the silence at His feet, the eye resting upon a page of His Word, or only looking up to Him through the darkness, have we not found that He can so irradiate one passing moment with His light that its rays never die away, but shine on and on through days and years? Are not such moments proved to have been kept for Him? And if some, why not all?...
While we have been undervaluing these fractions of eternity, what has our gracious God been doing in them? How strangely touching are the words, 'What is man that Thou shouldest set Thine heart upon him, and that Thou shouldest visit him every morning, and try him every moment?' Terribly solemn and awful would be the thought that He has been trying us every moment, were it not for the yearning gentleness and love of the Father revealed in that wonderful expression of wonder, 'What is man, that Thou shouldest set Thine heart upon him?' Think of that ceaseless setting of His heart upon us, careless and forgetful children as we have been! And then think of those other words, note the less literally true because given under a figure, "I, the Lord, do keep it; I will water it every moment." (Havergal, Frances Ridley. Kept for the Master's Use. Nisbet & Co. LTD., 1908. Pages 30-36)