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Lead me in a Plain Path
Thursday, 8 December 2005
Site Update
Now Playing: Available Spiritual Resources
Topic: Admin

Bible-based blogs intended for spiritual blessing are listed.

Please review previous posts (much of Christian ministry is timeless) or find good material from the links at the side of the page.

Christian web pages below are hyperlinked; you can just click on the title to read.

web address -> Bible Gems for the Week
web address -> Bible Gems Monthly Archive
web address -> Sound Words for Pilgrims
web address -> Worth Pondering from God's Word

web address -> Answers to Life's Questions
web address -> Scripture Selections
web address -> Scripture Journal
web address -> Precious Promises

web address -> Reading Exhortation Doctrine
web address -> Word of Truth Faithful Sayings
web address -> Lead me in a Plain Path
web address -> Form of Sound Words
web address -> Learning More of Him

web address -> Pattern of Good Works
web address -> Magnify the Lord
web address -> Choice Gleanings
web address -> Spurgeon Selections

web address -> Answers to Life’s Questions
web address -> Christian Hymns and History
web address -> Quotes from H.E. Hayhoe
web address -> Quotes from Christians
web address -> Topical Devotions


Posted by dondegr8 at 11:53 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 2 January 2009 8:21 PM EST
Thursday, 10 March 2005
Change
Topic: Admin
Due to time constraints, there will be no new postings on this web page for the next few months.

Please read postings from the past year, or click on the links at the side bar.

Otherwise, you are welcome to read recent postings from any of my other Christian sites listed below.

The web pages below ARE hyperlinked; you can just click on the title:

web address -> Choice Gleanings
web address -> Spurgeon Selections
web address -> Streams in the Desert
web address -> Bible Gems
web address -> Scripture Journal
web address -> Pattern of Good Works
web address -> Topical Devotions
web address -> Bible Gem Archive


Posted by dondegr8 at 7:45 AM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 30 March 2005 12:27 PM EST
Friday, 25 February 2005
God's Perfect Timing
Now Playing: Do we accept that God's plans are the best ?
Topic: Patience
Genesis 17:1,2

In Genesis 17:1 we are told, "And when Abram was ninety years old and nine, the LORD appeared to Abram, and said unto him, I am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect."

Thirteen years had gone by since Abraham had hearkened unto Sarah, and during this time there was no mention of God's appearing to Abraham.

In the Scriptures these 13 years are passed over as a period of spiritual barrenness. For Abraham it was what is known spiritually as a time of wood, hay and stubble.

But why all of this waiting? God had promised Abraham a son, and by this time only Ishmael had been born into his home--by a means that was not pleasing to the Lord. The reason for God's delay was so God could bring Abraham to the end of himself.

Later it was said of Abraham, "And being not weak in faith, he considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old, neither yet the deadness of Sarah's womb" (Rom. 4:19).

Before divine power is put forth, man must learn his own impotency. Not until Abraham's body was as good as dead would God fulfill His word.

Man's extremity is God's opportunity. Though to Abraham this seemed like a long delay, God was right on time. God has a perfect time for everything.

"As for God, his way is perfect" (Ps. 18:30).

(from T. Epp)

Posted by dondegr8 at 9:21 AM EST
Tuesday, 22 February 2005
Testing has a Purpose
Now Playing: Are we seeking for God's answers in our troubles ?
Topic: Testing
Genesis 22:1,2; 1 Peter 1:3-7

God wanted Abraham to prove that he loved Him more than the things of this life and more than any other person. For this test God chose the person who was the dearest object of Abraham's life--Isaac.

God may sometimes test you this way also. Although the test may be severe and may involve the dearest person or thing in your life, you will be a better person for God as a result of the test.

The offering of human sacrifices was a common practice of the heathen in Abraham's time. However, there is no other incident where God tested a believer in this particular way.

Human sacrifices were strongly condemned by God in the Old Testament. His people, Israel, were to totally abstain from this heathen practice. But with Abraham, God chose this test to prove whom Abraham loved most. God knew what he would do.

When God promised him a son, Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him for righteousness. But, having received the promised son, there was the danger that Abraham would give more of his attention to the gift than to the Giver.

He knew that out of Isaac would come the descendants God had promised. Abraham was in danger of concentrating on the fulfillment of God's promise to the exclusion of God Himself, who had made the promise.

"Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps" (1 Pet. 2:21).

(from T. Epp)

Posted by dondegr8 at 9:42 AM EST
Wednesday, 16 February 2005
Trusting despite Circumstances
Now Playing: Are we willing to trust in God in every situation ?
Topic: Devotion
Genesis 22:4-5; Hebrews 11:17-19

Genesis 22:4-5 says, "Then on the third day Abraham lifted up his eyes, and saw the place afar off. And Abraham said unto his young men, Abide ye here with the ass; and I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to you."

In these verses there are three things in particular that reveal the tremendous faith of Abraham.

First, he told the young men who were with him, "Abide ye here." Once Abraham saw the mountain that God was going to send him to, he wanted to be sure that nothing or no one would hinder what he had undertaken.

Second, Abraham told the young men, "I and the lad will go yonder and worship." Thus Abraham gave up all of his desires and ascribed everything to God. It was a true act of worship when Abraham was willing to give up everything for God.

Third, Abraham told the young men, "I and the lad will. . . come again to you." His faith was in the God of the resurrection. He believed that God would bring his son back to life.

Can we trust God when we are totally unable to see how He is going to work out His will? Abraham demonstrated that he could.

"Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him" (Job 13:15).

(from T. Epp)


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Posted by dondegr8 at 9:03 AM EST
Updated: Saturday, 11 November 2006 3:43 PM EST
Sunday, 13 February 2005
Friend of God
Now Playing: Are we willing to let our faith be tested by God ?
Topic: Guidance
Genesis 18:16-21

Abraham's faith grew and developed through the spiritual exercise of testing. This is also why God permits our faith to be tested.

First Peter 1:7 says the purpose of testing is so "the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ."

In Genesis 18 there are some very significant statements about Abraham. The Lord said, "Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do; seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth shall be blessed in him?" (vv. 17,18).

The Lord was going to destroy the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, but He told Abraham first. Truly, Abraham was the friend of God.

God said of Abraham, "For I know him, that he will command his children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment; that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which he hath spoken of him" (v. 19).

What a tremendous statement--and to think it was spoken by God Himself! God knew Abraham intimately, and He knows every detail about us.

Are we determined to do His will at any cost? Does He have first place in our lives and thinking? Do we command our children and our household after Him?

"He found him in a desert land, and in the waste howling wilderness; he led him about, he instructed him, he kept him as the apple of his eye" (Deut. 32:10).

(selected from T. Epp)

Posted by dondegr8 at 5:16 PM EST
Wednesday, 9 February 2005
Result of Pride
Now Playing: Are we trusting in our own strength ?
Topic: Pride
Stay on guard!

Proverbs 16:18 "Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall."

Anyone who has traveled to Edinburgh, Scotland has probably seen the Edinburgh castle. It is a tower of seemingly insurmountable strength. However, long ago that castle was attacked and seized.

One place in the fortress was protected by its steepness and impregnability, they thought, so no guards were posted there. But at an obvious weak spot was where the most guards were stationed. Wouldn't you know that at an opportune time, the attacking army sent a small band up that unguarded slope and surprised the garrison into surrender. Where the castle was strong, there it was weak.

In his autobiography, Benjamin Franklin wrote: "There is perhaps no one of our natural passions so hard to subdue as pride. Beat it down, stifle it, mortify it as much as one pleases, it is still alive. Even if I could conceive that I had completely overcome it, I should probably be proud of my humility".

I guess the even best of us struggle with pride in our lives -- wait, come to think of it -- it's most likely the best of us that struggle with pride the most!

The enemy of our souls would like nothing more than to cause us to stumble -- especially in the areas we feel most secure!! We need to be on guard. Let's never put our hope in our own strengths, or anyone else's for that matter. We must remind ourselves continuously that it is the Lord who is our strength, and He alone.

(selected)

Posted by dondegr8 at 2:30 PM EST
Wednesday, 19 January 2005
Biblical Leadership
Now Playing: Are we following the scriptural pattern for service to God ?
Topic: Service
Biblical Pattern for today

In recent years, there has been an organizational explosion in Christendom of such proportions as to make one dizzy. Every time a believer gets a new idea for advancing the cause of Christ, he forms a new mission board, corporation or institution!

One result is that capable teachers and preachers have been called away from their primary ministries in order to become administrators. If all mission board administratorswere serving on the mission field,it would greatly reduce the need for personnel there.

Another result of the proliferation of organizations is that vast sums of money are needed for overhead, and thus diverted from direct gospel outreach. The greater part of every dollar given to many Christian organizations is devoted to the expense of maintaining the organization rather than to the primary purpose for which it was founded.

Organbizations often hinder the fulfillment of the Great Commisision. Jesus told His disciples to teach all the things He had commanded. Many who work for Christian organizations find they are not permitted to teach all the truth of God. They must not teach certain controversial matters for fear they will alienate the constituency to whom they look for financial support..

The multiplication of Christian institutions has too often resulted in factions, jealousy, and rivalry that have done great harm to the testimony of Christ.

Consider the overlapping multiplicity of Christian organizations at work, at home, and abroad. Each competes for limited personnel and for shrinking financial resources. And consider how many of these organizations really owe their origin to purely human rivalry, though public statements usually refer to God's will. (Daily Notes of the Scripture Union)

And it is true that organizations have a way of perpetuatung themselves long after they have outlived their usefulness. The wheels grind on heavily even though the vision of the founders has been lost, and the glory of a once-dynamic movement has departed. It was spiritual wisdom, not primitive naivete, that saved the early Christians from from setting up human organizations to carry on the work of the Lord.

G H Lang writes: An acute writer, contrasting the apostolic work with the more usual modern missionary methods, has said that "we found missions, the apostles founded churches." The distinction is sound and pregnant. The apostles founded churches, and they founded nothing else, because for the ends in view nothing else was required or could have been so suitable.

In each place where they labored they formed the converts into a local assembly, with elders --- always elders, never an elder (Acts 14.23, 15.6, 23; 20.17; Phil. 1.1) --- to guide, to rule to shepherd, men qualified by the Lord and recognised by the saints. (1 Cor 16.15; 1 Thess. 5.12, 13; 1 Tim. 5.17-19) and with deacons, appointed by the assembly (Acts 6.1-6; Phil. 1.1)--- in this contasted with the elders --- to attend to the few but very important temporal affairs, and in particular to the distribution of the funds of the assembly . . . . All they (the apostles) did in the way of organizing was to form the disciples gathered into other such assemblies. No other organization than the local assembly appears in the New Testiment, no do we find even the germ of anything further."

To the early Christians and their apostolic leadership, the congregation was the divinely-appointed unit on earth through which God chose to work, and the only such unit to which He promised perpetuity was the church.

[from the Believer's Bible Commentary, William MacDonald, p 1591, with author's permission]

Posted by dondegr8 at 11:37 AM EST
Friday, 7 January 2005
Alone with God
Now Playing: How much time are we truly alone with God ?
Topic: Devotion
Alone With God

"And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a
man with him until the breaking of the day" (Gen.
32:24).

Left alone! What different sensations those words conjure up to each of us. To some they spell loneliness and desolation, to others rest and quiet. To be left alone without God, would be too awful for words, but to be left alone with Him is a foretaste of Heaven! If His followers spent more time alone with Him, we should have spiritual giants again.

The Master set us an example. Note how often He went to be alone with God; and He had a mighty purpose behind the command, "When thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray."

The greatest miracles of Elijah and Elisha took place when they were alone with God. It was alone with God that Jacob became a prince; and just there that we, too, may become princes--"men (aye, and women too!) wondered at" (Zech. 3:8). Joshua was alone when the Lord came to him. (Josh. 1:1) Gideon and Jephthah were by themselves when commissioned to save Israel. (Judges 6:11 and 11:29)

Moses was by himself at the wilderness bush. (Exodus 3:1-5) Cornelius was praying by himself when the angel came to him. (Acts 10:2) No one was with Peter on the house top, when he was instructed to go to the Gentiles. (Acts 10:9) John the Baptist was alone in the wilderness (Luke 1:90), and John the Beloved alone in Patmos, when nearest God. (Rev. 1:9)

Covet to get alone with God. If we neglect it, we not only rob ourselves, but others too, of blessing, since when we are blessed we are able to pass on blessing to others. It may mean less outside work; it must mean more depth and power, and the consequence, too, will be "they saw no man save Jesus only."

To be alone with God in prayer cannot be over-emphasized.

"If chosen men had never been alone,
In deepest silence open-doored to God,
No greatness ever had been dreamed or done."

(selected from R.K.G.)



Posted by dondegr8 at 8:42 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 27 January 2005 10:18 AM EST
Friday, 17 December 2004
Fulfillment of Scripture
Now Playing: Are we amazed at God's perfect plan for all time and all history ?
Topic: Scripture
Art Thou `That Prophet'?

"This is of a truth `that prophet' that should come into the world."

Deuteronomy 18:18, "I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee, and will put my words in his mouth; and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him."

John 1:19: "And this is the record of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, 'Who art thou? '
20: "And He confessed, and denied not; but confessed, I am not the Christ.
21: "And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elias? And He saith, 'I am not'. Art thou that prophet? And he answered, 'No'.
22: "Then said they unto him, 'Who art thou ?' that we may give an answer to them that sent us. 'What sayest thou of thyself ?'
23: He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias."


John 1:45: "Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto him, 'We have found him, of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph'."


John 6:14: "Then those men, when they had seen the miracle that Jesus did, said, 'This is of a truth that prophet that should come into the world'."


Acts 7:37: "This is that Moses, which said unto the children of Israel, 'A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; Him shall ye hear'."


Jesus; and Moses,

Jesus; took up residence in Egypt, as did Moses.
Jesus; earthly family initially rejected Him, as did Moses' family.
Jesus; earthly family later believed and supported Him, as did Moses family.
Jesus role; Prophet, Priest, Lawgiver, Teacher and Leader of men, as was Moses.
Jesus fulfilled the law before Israel, which Moses delivered to Israel.
Jesus; taught new revelations from God, as did Moses.
Jesus; authenticated His teaching with miracles, as did Moses.
Jesus; confronted evil/demoniac power and subdued it, as did Moses.
Jesus; 70 disciples to teach the people, Moses appointed 70 elders.
Jesus; chose 12 apostles to bless the lands, Moses chose 12 spies to search out the land.
Jesus; fasted for 40 days, as did Moses.
Jesus; commanded the waves and natural elements, Moses - the Red Sea,
Jesus; transfigured, shone with Glory, as did Moses on Sinai,
Jesus; spread open His arms, interceding for mankind on the cross, with a man on each side of Him, as did Moses, interceding for Israel, with a man on each side of him.
Jesus; lifted up on the cross, Moses elevated the brass serpent,
Jesus; faced the rebellion of His own people, as did Moses.
Jesus; promised the Comforter, Moses promised "That Prophet",

Moses, delivered the children of Israel from Egyptian bondage,

Jesus Christ, delivered freedom to all who would trust in Him.

Moses, seven days later, Feast of First-fruits, led the children of Israel through the Red Sea, type of death and resurrection, and defeating the enemy of Israel.

Jesus, on the Feast of First fruits, became the First Fruits of the resurrection of the dead, defeating the archenemy of mankind, death.

Moses, 50 days later, on the feast of Penticost, delivered the Word of God from Mount Sinai,

Jesus, on the Feast of Penticost, delivered the baptism of the Holy Ghost.

Then those men, when they had seen the miracle that Jesus did, said, This is of a truth `that prophet' that should come into the world. (John 6:14)


Adapted from, "Unveiling Mysteries of the Bible" G. R. Jeffries (by D. Hopkins)

Posted by dondegr8 at 12:23 PM EST
Updated: Friday, 17 December 2004 12:32 PM EST

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