Where is God? 
					
					– “The same God who in his revelation limits himself, as it 
					were, to definite places, occasions, and persons, is, 
					nevertheless, exalted infinitely high above the whole realm 
					of nature and every creature. Even in those parts of 
					Scripture which stress his temporal and local manifestation 
					the idea of his exaltation and omnipotence is not wanting: 
					the Lord who walks in the garden is the Creator of heaven 
					and earth. The God who appears to Jacob determines the 
					future. Although the God of Israel dwells in the midst of 
					His people in the house which Solomon builds for him, yet 
					even the heaven of heavens cannot contain him (1Kings 8:27). 
					He reveals himself in nature, and lives along with his 
					people, as it were; but at the same time he is the 
					Incomprehensible (Job 26:14; 36:26; 37:5), the Incomparable 
					(Isaiah 40:18, 25; 46:5), the One who is exalted infinitely 
					above time and space and every creature (Isaiah 40:12ff; 
					41:4; 44:6; 48:12)… To summarize: throughout the entire Old 
					Testament these two elements are found side by side: (a) 
					‘God dwelleth with him that is of a contrite and humble 
					spirit,’ and (b) he is at the same time ‘the High and Lofty 
					One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy’ (Isaiah 
					57:15).” –from The Doctrine of God by Herman Bavinck 
					(p. 18). 
					 
					
					
					Not Killed by Water Baptism 
					– This story is told by the Baptist preacher John Taylor of an 
					incident that occurred in Kentucky during the 1780’s: “I was 
					invited to baptize some people there [on Silver Creek in 
					Madison County, Kentucky]. I think five were baptized at the 
					time and among them an old man the name of Wilson, 
					apparently far gone in a consumption. This became a great 
					trial to my faith. I found [that] the old man could only 
					speak a little above a whisper. And though he had been much 
					of a singer and a prayerful man in his family, all had been 
					laid aside perhaps for a twelvemonth for want of breath.
					
					
					“I had lately been reading Mr. [David] Rice’s pamphlet on 
					infant baptism, where he had aver[r]ed that it was instant 
					death to wet a man allover in the last stages of a 
					consumption. If all this is true, thought I, which I did not 
					know to the contrary, in this thing I had great perplexity.
					
					
					
					“This old man came foremost to the water. And I [was] almost 
					ready to tremble with fear, but in we went. As quick as he 
					recovered from the water, he raised his hands [and] with 
					pretty strong voice cried, ‘Glory to God! Glory to God!’ The 
					first thought I had was, ‘Old man, you are not yet killed.’
					
					“A handsome, little revival of religion went on. This old 
					gentleman’s voice was so far restored that he resumed 
					worship in his family and became a pleasant singer in public 
					worship. And [he] lived after this for several years, so 
					that wetting him allover did him no harm.” –from Baptist 
					on the American Frontier: A History of Ten Baptist Churches 
					by John Taylor (p. 192). 
					 
					June 29, 2006
					
					
					Three Stages of Spiritual Maturity – 
					“First John 2 [1John 2:12-14] gives us three stages of 
					maturity among believers. John speaks of the ‘little 
					child’ as the one who understands that his sins are 
					forgiven. That stage is very important and in understanding 
					it, we all say ‘Amen.’ The ‘young men’ are those who 
					have overcome the wicked one. At that point we have a great 
					drop-out rate among our ranks. There are those strong enough 
					to take on spiritual warfare without hurting God’s name in 
					the process, but they are fewer and fewer compared to what 
					we have seen in church history. Finally, John says the third 
					category is ‘fathers.’ They are such because they 
					‘know God.’ It is important to note that ‘fathers’ are 
					referred to not only because they are older, but also 
					because it is the father that produces children. They are 
					selfless and secure enough to ‘grow others up.’ God knows we 
					are in great need of a double dose of ‘fathers’ within 
					Christianity, not men who are supersaints, but men who 
					understand and know God.” –from The God You Can Know 
					by Dan DeHaan (p.13). 
					
					
					Prayer for the Day Ahead –“We 
					do not know what a day may bring forth (Proverbs 27:1). Few 
					of us think in the morning about what tidings we may hear or 
					what events may befall us before night. We should beg God 
					for grace to carry us through the duties and difficulties 
					that we do not foresee as well as those that we do. In order 
					that we may stand ‘complete in all the will of God’ 
					(Colossians 4:12), we should pray that as the day is, so our 
					strength may be (Deuteronomy 33:25). We will find that 
					‘sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof’ 
					(Matthew 6:34), and that therefore as it is folly to think 
					about tomorrow’s events, so it is wisdom to think about 
					today’s duty. The supplies of divine grace are sufficient 
					for this day and the duty of it. We should pray that God’s 
					grace will thoroughly furnish us for every good word and 
					work and thoroughly fortify against every evil word and 
					work, that God’s grace will help us not to think, speak, or 
					do anything all day that we will wish unthought, unspoken, 
					or undone at night.” –from Experiencing God’s Presence 
					by Matthew Henry (p.49-50). 
					 
					June 28, 2006
					
					
					Calvinistic Koran 
					
					– The following quotes from Al-Quran translated by 
					Ahmed Ali are strangely close the Calvinistic teaching on 
					predestination:
					
						- 
						
						“He 
						alone is guided whom God shows the way; and whom He 
						leads astray is surely lost. Many of the jinns and human 
						beings have We destined for Hell, who possess hearts but 
						do not feel, have eyes but do not see, have ears but do 
						not hear, like cattle, even worse than them. They are 
						people unconcerned.” 7:178-179 
- 
						
						
						“Whosoever God allows to go astray has none to show him 
						the way, for He leaves them to wander perplexed in their 
						wickedness.” 7:186 
					
					Saved! Saved! 
					
					– In July of 1910, the Baptist Evangelist Mordecai Ham held 
					an evangelistic campaign in Gonzales, Texas. “One of the 
					most popular evangelistic hymns was born during this 
					campaign. The evangelist was preaching on the subject, 
					‘Christ Our Refuge.’ In the audience was a man who had 
					killed four men and had despaired of ever being saved. He 
					listened to Mr. Ham explain that Christ is a refuge for 
					sinners of any and every stripe and that the ‘Cities of 
					Refuge,’ described in the Old Testament, are a type 
					of Christ, who is a haven of hope and eternal forgiveness 
					for all who will flee to Him. Midway during the sermon this 
					man jumped up from his seat and shouted: ‘Saved! Saved! 
					Saved!’ Mr. Scofield [Jack P. Scholfield] was so inspired 
					that the next afternoon he sat outside the hotel, where the 
					Ham party was residing, and composed both the words and the 
					music for the hymn entitled, ‘Saved, Saved.’ That night the 
					tabernacle audience heard the song for the first time.” 
					–from A Biography of M. F. Ham by E. E. Ham 
					(p.99-100). 
					 
					June 27, 2006
					
					
					Better Than Sacrifices 
					– According to John Bunyan in The Acceptable Sacrifice: The 
					Excellency of a Broken Heart (p.2-3), there “are four 
					things that are very acceptable to God. The
					
						- 
						First 
						is, The sacrifice of the body of Christ for our sins; of 
						this you read, Hebrews 10; For there you have it 
						preferred to all burnt offerings and sacrifices; it is 
						this that pleaseth God; it is this that sanctifieth and 
						so setteth the people acceptable in the sight of God.
- 
						
						Secondly, Unfeigned love to God is counted better than 
						all sacrifices, or external parts of worship: ‘And to 
						love him with all the heart, and with all the 
						understanding, and with all the soul, and with all the 
						strength, and to love his neighbour as himself, is more 
						than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices” (Mark 
						12:33).
- 
						
						Thirdly, To walk holily and humbly and obediently 
						towards and before God, is another: Micah 6:6-8. “Hath 
						the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and 
						sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, 
						to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than 
						the fat of rams” (1Samuel 15:22). 
- 
						
						Fourthly, And this in our test is the fourth, “The 
						sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a 
						contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise” [Psalm 
						51:17].” 
					
					Teaching Power of Music 
					
					– John and Charles Wesley in their founding of the Methodist 
					movement in eighteenth century England understood the power 
					of singing in the church. A modern author has stated it this 
					way: “Singing attracts attention (music, rhythm, rhyme); it 
					turns passive listeners into active participants; it engages 
					members of an assembly in a common constructive activity… 
					Moreover, singing allows people with no or low literary 
					skills to become familiar with key texts; it has a mnemonic 
					function, and may therefore be a more efficient and less 
					tedious medium than, say, preaching: it could be, and has 
					been, used to teach doctrine to the theologically 
					untrained.” Or as Paul said in Colossians 3:16, “teaching 
					and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and 
					spiritual songs.” –quote from The Hymn: A Journal of 
					Congregational Song, Summer 2005, Volume 56, No.3, 
					“Hymns as Literature, Language and Discourse: Wesleyan Hymns 
					as a Case Example” by Jean-Pierre Van Noppen (p. 23). 
					 
					June 26, 2006
					
					
					Be Still in the Midst of Noise – 
					“It is significant that the psalm in which the words ‘Be 
					still’ occur [Psalm 46] is filled with noise and commotion. 
					The earth shakes, the waters roar and are troubled, the 
					mountains threaten to tumble into the midst of the sea, the 
					nations rage, the kingdoms are moved and the sound of war is 
					heard throughout the land. Then a voice is heard out of the 
					silence saying, ‘Be still, and know that I am God.’ [Psalm 
					46:10]” –from God Tells the Man Who Cares by A. W. 
					Tozer (p.21). 
					
					
					Nightly Meetings with Bwana – 
					
					The English missionary C. T. Studd (1860-1931) established 
					and operated the Heart of Africa Mission in his later years. 
					He was known to the African nationals and the other 
					missionaries as Bwana. His work with the other missionaries 
					was amazing. “Probably the times with Bwana which will live 
					most in their memory are the nightly meetings at Ibambi. 
					More than anything else they kept the Mission on the true 
					foundation of all spiritual work—the Bible and prayer. There 
					were no time limits, but he just opened the Bible, read 
					maybe two or three chapters, and then talked. The Epistles 
					were his favourites. One hour, two hours, in Conference days 
					till after midnight, night after night, it was always the 
					same, our hearts burned within us as we met with Jesus. The 
					greatest of all the lessons that we learned there was that 
					if Christian workers want continual power and blessing, they
					must give time to meet together daily, not for a 
					short, formal meeting, but long enough for God really to 
					speak through His Word, to face out together the challenges 
					of the work, to deal with anything that arises to hinder 
					unity, and then to go to God in prayer and faith. This alone 
					is the secret of victorious and spiritual warfare. No amount 
					of hard work or earnest preaching can take its place.” –from
					C. T. Studd: Cricketer & Pioneer by Norman Grubb 
					(p.218). 
					 
					June 23, 2006
					
					
					Things That Cannot Be Undone 
					– “There are things which even the forgiven man cannot undo anymore 
					than you cast a stone into a pool, and then with your hand 
					stay the ever-multiplying circles. We live in a world of 
					laws that cannot be trifled with. ‘Whatsoever a man soweth, 
					that shall he also reap’ [Galatians 6:7]. David sowed shame, 
					appetite, and murder, and one by one they come back on his 
					head. We recognize this law and own its justice, but too 
					often our lives are so ordered that we are as men that 
					expect that our lives and our deeds will be exceptions to 
					the general law. With God there is mercy and plenteous 
					redemption. But the Sword!
					
					
					            Wounds of the soul, though healed, will ache,
					
					
					            The reddening scars remain
					
					
					              And make confession;
					
					
					            Lost innocence returns no more,
					
					            
					We are not what we were
					
					
					              Before transgression.”
					
					
					--from The Parables of the Old Testament by Clarence 
					E. Macartney (p.42). 
					
					
					Secret of the Lord 
					
					– “The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him” [Psalm 
					25:14]. He deals familiarly with them. He calls them not 
					servants only, but friends; and he treats them as friends 
					[John 15:15]. He affords them more than promises; for he 
					opens to them the plan of his great designs from everlasting 
					to everlasting; shews them the strong foundations and 
					inviolable securities of his favour towards them, the 
					height, and depth, and length, and breadth of his love, 
					which passeth knowledge [Ephesians 3:18-19], and the 
					unsearchable riches of his grace. He instructs them in the 
					mysterious conduct of his providence, the reasons and ends 
					of all his dispensations in which they are concerned; and 
					solves a thousand hard questions to their satisfaction, 
					which are inexplicable to the natural wisdom of man 
					[1Corinthians 2:12-14].” –from The Works of John Newton: 
					Volume 1 (p.310-311). 
					 
					June 22, 2006
					
					
					Two Old Testament Pillars 
					– According to the Puritan Thomas Goodwin, “there were two grand 
					pillars in the Old Testament: one, God’s promise of Christ; 
					and the other, this manifesto of God’s gracious 
					nature [in Exodus 34:6-7]: and lo, the advantage God took 
					for both, upon the commission of the most heinous sins; the 
					one upon occasion of the first and greatest sin, and of the 
					largest extent of mischief in the consequence that ever was 
					committed, viz., our first parents’ fall, by which all 
					mankind were undone; and it was upon that occasion he let 
					fall that promise of Christ [Genesis 3:15], which was the 
					first foundation of Old Testament faith, and continues such 
					to the end: and now again upon the first greatest sin this 
					people did commit after their having received the law [the 
					making of the golden calf in Exodus 32], and heard God’s 
					voice, it was that he publisheth this other [the declaration 
					of His mercy in Exodus 34:6-7].” –from Justifying Faith 
					by Thomas Goodwin (p. 18). 
					
					Trusting Not in the Promises of God 
					
					– “Distrust of God’s promise is an impeachment of his 
					wisdom: a secret reviling of it, as if he had not taken due 
					consideration before he past his word; or a suspicion of his 
					power, as if he could not accomplish his word. We trust the 
					physician’s skill with our bodies, and the lawyer’s counsel 
					with our estates; but are loath to rely upon God for the 
					concerns of our lives. If he be wise to dispose of us, why 
					do we distrust him?” –from The Existence and Attributes 
					of God: Volume 1 by Stephen Charnock (p. 593). 
					 
					June 21, 2006
					
					
					Frequent Thoughts of Jesus Christ 
					– “Generally Christ is nigh unto believers, and of a ready access; 
					and the principal actings of the life of faith consist in 
					the frequency of our thoughts concerning him; for hereby 
					‘Christ liveth’ in us, as he is said to do. Galatians 2:20. 
					This we cannot do, unless we have frequent thoughts on him, 
					and converse with him. It is often said among men that one 
					lives in another. This cannot be but where the affections of 
					one are so engaged unto another that night and day he thinks 
					of him, and is thereby, as it were, present with him. So 
					ought it to be between Christ and believers. He dwells in 
					them by faith; but the actings of this life in them (as, 
					wherever life is, it will be in act and exercise) are 
					proportionable unto their thoughts of him, and delight in 
					him.” –The Glory of Christ by John Owen (p. 80-81).
					
					
					Like a Bottle in the Smoke 
					
					– Psalm 119:83 states, “For I am become like a bottle in the 
					smoke; yet do I not forget thy statutes.” “What an affecting 
					picture of misery! Not only were his patience and hope—but 
					his very body—‘dried up’ by long-continued affliction. 
					(Proverbs 17:22) This is he, who in the prime of youth was 
					‘ruddy and of a beautiful countenance, and goodly to look 
					to’ (1Samuel 16:12),--now shriveled up like a bottle 
					of skin (Joshua 9:4; Matthew 9:17), hung up in the smoke… 
					How did this man of God behave? When his soul was 
					fainting, his hope in the word kept him from sinking. 
					(Psalm 119:81) Under the further continuance of the trial, 
					the same recollection gives him support—yet do I not 
					forget thy statutes. (Compare Psalm 119:51, 61, 109, 
					141; 44:17-19.) –from Psalm 119 by Charles Bridges 
					(p. 218-219). 
					 
					June 20, 2006
					
					
					God Governs in the Affairs of Men 
					– In 1787 at the Federal Convention in Philadelphia, 
					Pennsylvania, at a critical juncture in the writing of the 
					U.S. Constitution, Benjamin Franklin addressed the President 
					of the Convention: “I have lived, Sir, a long time; and the 
					longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this 
					truth, That God governs in the affairs of men! We 
					have been assured, Sir, in the Sacred Writings, that ‘except 
					the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it!’ 
					[Psalm 127:1] I firmly believe this; and I also believe that 
					without His concurring aid we shall succeed in this 
					political building no better than the builders of Babel; we 
					shall be divided by our little partial local interests, our 
					projects will be confounded, and we ourselves shall become a 
					reproach and a by-word down to future ages. And, what is 
					worse, mankind may hereafter, from this unfortunate instance 
					despair of establishing government by human wisdom, and 
					leave it to chance, war and conquest.
					
					
					“I therefore beg leave to move, that henceforth prayers, 
					imploring the assistance of heaven, and its blessings on our 
					deliberations, be held in this Assembly every morning and 
					that one of more of the clergy of this city be requested to 
					officiate in that service.” –quoted from History of the 
					United States by J. A. Spencer in The Seven Laws of 
					the Harvest by John W. Lawrence (p.31). 
					
					Elected According to Choice 
					
					– William Bell Riley (1861-1947) served for many years as 
					pastor of the First Baptist Church of Minneapolis, Minnesota 
					(from 1897 to 1943). He was also a key figure in the early 
					independent Baptist church movement. While recognizing the 
					sovereignty of God, he “also set forth his position on the 
					freeness of the gospel and man’s freeness in responding 
					thereto: ‘The impression that prevails with some people that 
					God only calls a few of His favorites is absolutely false. 
					Isaiah, speaking for God, said, “Ho, every one that 
					thirsteth, come ye to the waters.” [Isaiah 55:1] …No man 
					ever hears the gospel, no matter who he is and to what stock 
					he belongs, but God is calling to him… Every promise of 
					salvation made by the Son of God is His call to the sinner… 
					The soul’s election depends upon the soul’s choice. Thou, my 
					friend, art the only person who can settle this question of 
					election. It is not settled in Heaven; it is settled on 
					earth. It is not settled of the Lord; it is settled by man.’ 
					(The Bible of the Expositor and the Evangelist New 
					Testament, Vol.9, pp.152-153, 155, 158)” –from Divine 
					Sovereignty and Human Freedom by Samuel Fisk (p.15).
					
					 
					June 19, 2006
					
					
					Faith Defined as Commitment 
					– “O fools, and slow of heart to believe…” (Luke 24:25). Of this 
					verse, Oswald Chambers said, “To believe is literally to 
					commit. Belief is a moral act, and Jesus makes an enormous 
					demand of a man when He asks him to believe in Him. To be ‘a 
					believer in Jesus’ means to bank our confidence in Him, to 
					stake our soul upon His honor—‘I know whom I have believed…” 
					[2Timothy 2:12] We pray, ‘Lord, increase our faith,’ and we 
					try to pump up faith, but it does not come. What is wrong? 
					The moral surrender to Jesus has not taken place. Will I 
					surrender to Jesus from the real center of my life, and 
					deliberately and willfully stake my confidence in what He 
					says? Many of us use religious jargon; we talk about 
					believing in God, but our actual life proves that we do not 
					really believe one tenth of what we profess.” –from The 
					Place of Help by Oswald Chambers (p. 227). 
					
					A 
					Drunkard Brought to God 
					– A. W. Tozer told this story: “I knew a godly, praying woman whose 
					husband, God bless him, was a drunkard. His stomach wouldn’t 
					hold down his food, so he used to come home with his clothes 
					dirty clear to his feet. I’m afraid I know what I would have 
					done to him, but she didn’t. She prayed, cleaned him off and 
					put him to bed. When he woke up the next morning with a 
					hangover, he’d promise her anything, but then he’d go out 
					again with the boys and come home swaying from side to side, 
					covered with filth. And she’d go through the same thing all 
					over again. She prayed for years for that man. I don’t know 
					how the poor woman ever endured it. But she prayed on. She 
					was one of those happy Christians, a little wisp of a woman.
					
					
					“One day her drunken husband came to church, came down 
					front, got down on his knees and bawled like a drunkard 
					bawls—half self-pity, half something else. But God saved 
					him. He became a model Christian and lived for God for some 
					years afterward. And she walked around just as proud of him 
					as an eagle that had hatched another. She’d brought him to 
					God—hatched that fellow out by prayer and patience.
					
					“I suppose there were times when she heard him snoring in 
					the corner in his drunken sleep and wished she’d never met 
					him. And I suppose there were times when she used to pity 
					herself and say, ‘God, how do You expect me to hang on?’ But 
					God whispered in her heart, Temptations are common to 
					all, but I’m faithful, I won’t let you down. 
					[1Corinthians 10:13] The result was that not only did he get 
					converted, but also a lot of the members of the family. And 
					they’ll be in heaven with their parents one of these days. 
					It just shows that when God says that He is faithful and 
					will not suffer you to be tempted beyond what you can bear, 
					He means exactly that.”  --from The Attributes of God: 
					Volume Two by A. W. Tozer (p. 176-177). 
					 
					June 16, 2006
					
					
					Faith Staggers Not 
					
					– “Faith staggers not: it is the voice of God, and must 
					therefore be received and honored. Hard things and wonderful 
					things were proclaimed to Noah; yet did he believe the 
					future unseen things proclaimed, and ‘moved with fear, 
					prepared an ark to the saving of his house’ (Hebrews 11:7). 
					Hard things and wonderful things were proclaimed to Abraham; 
					and yet how sublimely did his faith master the difficulty! 
					‘He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; 
					but was strong in faith, giving glory to God’ (Romans 4:20). 
					To assail the everlasting ramparts of heathenism in India, 
					was deemed, some sixty years ago, an enterprise of 
					stupendous folly; but by faith Carey and his associates went 
					down into the dark well of pagan wretchedness with the torch 
					of salvation; by faith [Andrew] Fuller and his associates 
					held the rope at the mouth: it was enough for their guidance 
					that Christ had commanded, ‘Go ye into all the world’ 
					(Mark 16:15); enough for their solace that He had promised, 
					‘Lo, I am with you alway’ (Matthew 28:20).” –from 
					Soul Prosperity by Charles Mallary (p. 28).
					
					Sacrificing Self for Another 
					
					– “One day the people of a southern town were startled by 
					the sight of a runaway team attached to a carriage. Clinging 
					desperately to the reins was a man being trampled beneath 
					the hoofs of the horses. He stopped the horses but at the 
					cost of his life. A needless sacrifice, thought the people, 
					till they discovered in the carriage his little child 
					unharmed. He gave up his life for his little one because he 
					loved it. Who can say the sacrifice was too great? How 
					feeble the comparison of this love with that of God who gave 
					His Son to die for a world at enmity with Him!” –from 
					Deliverance from the Penalty and Power of Sin by Orson 
					R. Palmer (p. 16). 
					 
					June 15, 2006
					
					
					Early Baptist Outreach to the Jews 
					– Henry Jessey (1601-1663) served as an English Baptist 
					pastor. “The year 1657 afforded Mr. Jessey a favourable 
					opportunity of displaying his benevolence. The Swedes and 
					Poles being engaged in war, the poor Jews at Jerusalem were 
					in a most distressed state; all supplies from their rich 
					brethren in other countries, upon whom they depended for 
					subsistence, being cut off. This induced Mr. Jessey to raise 
					a collection for their relief; and he sent them 
					
					£300, 
					with letters, strongly persuading them to embrace 
					Christianity.” –from The History and Antiquities of the 
					Dissenting Churches: Volume 1 by Walter Wilson (p. 44).
					
					
					Holy Reverence in Prayer 
					
					– In one of his sermons, Martyn Lloyd-Jones said, “the more 
					we know God and the more truly pious we are, the less 
					inclined shall we probably be to use in prayer such phrases 
					as: ‘Dear God’. Rather we shall be more inclined to say, 
					with the Lord Jesus Christ, ‘Holy Father’. The more we 
					realize something of the being of God, the more we realize 
					the importance of treading carefully. You remember what God 
					said to Moses, when He appeared in the burning bush, and 
					Moses was approaching to investigate: ‘put off thy shoes 
					from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is 
					holy ground’. [Exodus 3:5] That is it—reverence and godly 
					fear because of His majesty.” –from The Sacred Anointing 
					by Tony Sargent (p.135). 
					 
					June 14, 2006
					
					
					Titles to be Ridiculed 
					– Today, the English Baptist pastor Robert Robinson (1735-1790) is 
					best known as the author of the hymn, Come Thou Fount of 
					Every Blessing. Though he was loved by many, his 
					teachings and ways were considered strange to many others. 
					The “gravity and even pomposity assumed by many of his 
					ministerial colleagues was abhorred by him. He disliked and 
					ridiculed the titles which they gave to themselves. ‘I 
					wonder,’ he once said, ‘any man should be so silly as to 
					call me Reverend.’ To him this was an epithet which 
					could be ascribed only to deity.” [Psalm 111:9 – “He sent 
					redemption unto his people: he hath commanded his covenant 
					for ever: holy and reverend is his name.”] –from With 
					Freedom Fired by Graham W. Hughes (p.81). 
					
					
					From Martyrdom to Idolatry 
					– James Landrum Holmes served as one of the first Baptist 
					missionaries in North China. In 1861, when he was only 23 
					years old, Mr. Holmes went out with another missionary to 
					meet advancing forces of the Taiping Rebellion in an effort 
					to make peace. The two men were killed by the rebels and 
					their bodies were later found and buried. But this sad story 
					does not end here.
					
					
					“Once, in time of drought the people of Chuki village were 
					begging their gods for much-needed rain. Butchers’ shops 
					were closed. Every one abstained from meat and from the sin 
					of taking life. Boys and girls went about wearing willow 
					wreaths and waving willow branches crying out, ‘Heavenly 
					Mandarin, send rain, send rain.’ A village elder called the 
					leading men together and said, ‘How can you expect Heaven to 
					hear your prayers when you have failed to worship the spirit 
					of the man who gave his life to save you from being 
					butchered?’ 
					
					“So, to gain the favor of Heaven the men of the town erected 
					a monument to the memory of the Christian martyr. There they 
					prostrated themselves and burned incense invoking Mr. 
					Holmes’ spirit. There today [written in 1938] one will find 
					bunches of flowers, half-burned incense and offerings, made 
					by hungry-hearted Chinese who have a zeal for God, but who 
					have never had a chance to hear the Story that led Mr. 
					Holmes to China.” –from Up From Zero in North China 
					by Anna Steward Pruitt (p.21-23). 
					 
					June 13, 2006
					
					
					Blessing of Unanswered Prayers 
					– James Fraser (1886-1938), missionary to the Lisu people in China, 
					gave this testimony about prayer: “I read a testimony of Dr. 
					Stuart Holden’s, not long ago, in which he said that one of 
					the greatest blessings of his life had been his unanswered 
					prayers. And I can say the same in my measure. Unanswered 
					prayers have taught me to seek the Lord’s will instead of my 
					own. I suppose we have most of us had such experiences. We 
					have prayed and prayed and prayed, and no answer has come. 
					The heavens above us have been as brass. Yea, blessed brass, 
					if it has taught us to sink a little more of this 
					ever-present self of ours into the Cross of Christ. 
					Sometimes our petition has been such a good one, to all 
					appearances, but that does not insure it being of God. Many 
					‘good desires’ proceed from our uncrucified selves. 
					
					
					
					“Scripture and experience certainly agree that those who 
					live nearest to God are the most likely to know His will. We 
					are called to be ‘filled with the knowledge of his will’ 
					(Colossians 1:9). The ‘secret of the LORD is with them that 
					fear him; and he will shew them his covenant’. [Psalm 25:14] 
					We need to know more of the fellowship of Christ’s death. We 
					need to feed on the Word of God more than we do. We need 
					more holiness, more prayer. We shall not, then, be in so 
					much danger of mistaking His will.” –from Behind the 
					Ranges by Mrs. Howard Taylor (p.110-111). 
					
					
					Trinity Beyond Reason 
					– “That three beings should be one being, is a proposition which 
					contradicts reason, that is, our reason; but it does not 
					from thence follow, that it cannot be true; for there are 
					many propositions which contradict our reason, and yet they 
					are demonstrably true. One is, that very first principle of 
					all religion, the being of God. For, that any thing should 
					exist without a cause, or that any thing should be the cause 
					of its own existence, are propositions equally contradictory 
					to our reason; yet one of them must be true, or nothing 
					could have existed. 
					
					“All these difficulties arise from our imagining that the 
					mode of existence of all beings must be similar to our own, 
					that is, that they must exist in time and space, and hence 
					proceed our embarrassments on the subject. We know that no 
					two beings, with whose modes of existence we are acquainted, 
					can exist on the same point and space, and that therefore 
					they cannot be one. But how far beings whose mode of 
					existence bears no relation to time and space, may be united 
					we cannot comprehend. And, therefore, the possibility of 
					such a union we cannot positively deny.” –from 50 Years 
					Among the Baptists by David Benedict (p.154-155). 
					 
					June 12, 2006
					
					
					Shame of the Cross 
					
					– “The Roman Orator, Cicero, summarized the attitude of the 
					ancient world to the cross when he said: ‘Not only let the 
					cross be absent from the person of Roman citizens, but its 
					very name from their thoughts, eyes and ears.’ Two thousand 
					years ago we find no halo of glory, no beautiful 
					associations of history, no nobility, and no thought of 
					heroic sacrifice attached to the cross. How cluttered up is 
					the cross at the present time! Even the unbelieving world 
					now says: ‘The Cross stands for all that is noblest in 
					manhood.’ But is was not so in the beginning. It is not so 
					for us today. As soon as the Cross ceases to be to us, first 
					of all, the place of utmost shame and contempt, we make the 
					Cross of Christ of none effect.” [1Corinthians 1:17] –from
					Born Crucified by L. E. Maxwell (p.31). 
					
					
					Passing of the Law 
					
					– “John 15:25. ‘But this cometh to pass, that the word might 
					be fulfilled that is written in their law.’ This one and 
					only reference in the upper-room discourse to the law of 
					Moses is most significant. At has been shown, Christ, in 
					this discourse, has taken His followers beyond the cross and 
					is unfolding to them the very foundations of the new 
					teachings of grace. These men were Jews; but in this 
					teaching Christ does not speak to them as though the law of 
					Moses was binding on them. He says, ‘their law’; not ‘your 
					law,’ thus indicating that these Jews who had come under 
					grace were no longer under the reign of the law of Moses.
					
					“By this Scripture not only is the whole law system 
					definitely declared to be done away during the dispensation 
					of grace; but it is noticeable that the law, as law, is 
					never once applied to the believer as the regulating 
					principle of his life under grace. This is not an accidental 
					omission; it is the expression of the mind and will of God.” 
					–from Grace: The Glorious Theme by Lewis Sperry 
					Chafer (p.229-230). 
					 
					June 9, 2006
					
					
					At the Feet of Jesus 
					– From the invitation of George Whitefield’s sermon on “The Kingdom 
					of God” (Roman 14:17), we read: “My dear friends, I would 
					preach with all my heart till midnight, to do you good, till 
					I could preach no more. O that this body might hold out to 
					speak more for my dear Redeemer! Had I a thousand lives, had 
					I a thousand tongues, they should be employed in inviting 
					sinners to come to Jesus Christ! Come, then, let me prevail 
					with some of you to come along with me. Come poor, lost, 
					undone sinner, come just as you are to Christ, and say, If I 
					be damned, I will perish at the feet of Jesus Christ, where 
					never one perished yet. He will receive you with open arms; 
					the dear Redeemer is willing to receive you all.” –from 
					George Whitefield: Sermons: Volume I (p.24). 
					
					
					Bible Unmolested 
					– During the American Civil War, one of the Baptist church 
					buildings in northeast Tennessee, Mossy Creek, was 
					“irreparably damaged. Troops were quartered near this church 
					at different times during the war. A soldier in the Eleventh 
					New Hampshire Regiment, who was at Mossy Creek during 
					February, 1864, recorded the treatment that had been given 
					the church’s facilities by the invading armies. He wrote:
					
						
						At this 
						place there was a low, one-story brick church, of the 
						Baptist faith, and upon the desk there lay a large 
						old-fashioned Bible, upon the fly leaf of which was 
						written, ‘The Property of the Mossy Creek Baptist 
						Church.’ Although the building had been deprived of 
						everything combustible, yet within its walls were that 
						desk and that Bible. The doors and windows were gone, 
						but the Bible remained unmolested by both the armies 
						which had passed through the little village. It was kept 
						in a little box with a cover to it.”
					
					
					--from 
					Bi-Centennial Holston: Tennessee’s First Baptist Association 
					by Glenn A. Toomey (p.100-101)
					 
					June 8, 2006
					
					
					Easy Believism Reigns 
					– In Beyond Easy Believism, Gary Collins says: “Throughout 
					this land there are churches pastored by dynamic 
					communicators who avoid references to sin or failure, and 
					who build their popular sermons around inspiring stories of 
					personal triumph and the value of a positive mental 
					attitude. These churches preach a religion which is easy, 
					convenient, and comfortable. The idea of ‘sin’ has 
					vanquished, and with it, words like ‘self-discipline,’ 
					‘commitment,’ ‘repentance,’ and ‘sacrifice’ have disappeared 
					from the vocabulary and thinking of many modern worshippers 
					and their leaders. When there is no emphasis on repentance, 
					and little emphasis on holiness and the Word of God, there 
					is no true religion. Easy believism reigns instead.” –quoted 
					from Lordship: What Does it Mean? By R. Alan Day 
					(p.11). See Amos 6:1; 1Timothy 6:5.
					
					
					Topics: Easy Believism, Repentance
					
					
					Human Responsibility 
					– “G. Campbell Morgan, in a sermon on Hebrews 3:7-8, firmly spoke 
					out: ‘Two things are assumed by the Holy Spirit in this 
					text: first, that human responsibility begins with the 
					hearing of the voice, “today if ye shall hear His voice, 
					harden not your hearts”; and, secondly, that when the voice 
					is heard man is left free to obey or to disobey… We cannot 
					study this Bible without being brought face to face with 
					personal responsibility… A man in his choosing must choose 
					definitely between right and wrong, light and darkness, good 
					and evil…
					
					
					The second assumption of this text is that of the freedom of 
					the will when the voice speaks, “Today if ye shall hear His 
					voice, harden not your hearts.” This assuredly means that we 
					can harden them if we will; we can disobey, we can see the 
					light and choose the darkness; we can gaze on the high and 
					admire it, and then turn our face to the depths. It is 
					equally true that the heart can yield, that there can be 
					obedience… Responsibility is created by the voice of God; 
					when the voice of God speaks, man’s will is free to obey or 
					to disobey.’ ” –from Divine Sovereignty and Human Freedom 
					by Samuel Fisk (p.12-13). 
					
					Topics: Free Will, Human Responsibility 
					June 7, 2006
					
					
					Holy Kiss or Not? 
					
					– “My objection to the kiss, is not that it is become so 
					obsolete that people would not understand it as a token of 
					affection, but being confined in England to express the 
					affection of relations, or of the sexes, it would be 
					understood accordingly. Several Frenchmen, lately meeting 
					with some of their old friends, gave them the fraternal 
					embrace, and a company of English sailors, standing by, 
					judged them to be [sodomites] and began to stone them. If 
					our brethren were thus to salute the sisters, their 
					husbands, who might be unbelievers, would feel jealous and 
					many reproaches and scandals would be raised. Let such 
					salutations therefore be ever so pure in themselves, we 
					should not be able to ‘abstain from the appearance of evil.’ 
					” [1Thessalonians 5:22] –from The Armies of the Lamb: The 
					Spirituality of Andrew Fuller (p.152-153); from a letter 
					written in 1796. 
					
					
					Topics: Holy Kiss, Appearance of Evil
					
					
					When God is Displeased 
					– 2Samuel chapter eleven tells the story of David’s sin with 
					Bathsheba and his murder of her husband Uriah. The chapter 
					closes with this phrase from 2Samuel 11:27 – “But the thing 
					that David had done displeased the LORD.” “Did it displease 
					David? It is foolish to suppose that David never had a 
					moment of remorse or misgiving. Too many Psalms written and 
					too many hours spent with God for that. The savage and 
					atrocious vengeance that he took upon the conquered Ammonite 
					stronghold, causing the inhabitants to be dragged under 
					harrows, and to be driven through the furnaces, shows an 
					irritability fed by the fuel of an uneasy conscience. 
					[2Samuel 12:31] When people are mean and ugly and irritable, 
					the causes are not always physical and gastronomical; they 
					may lie far hidden in the recesses of a disturbed 
					conscience.” –from The Parables of the Old Testament 
					by Clarence E. Macartney (p.35). 
					
					Topics: Sin, Irritability, Guilt 
					June 6, 2006
					
					
					Growing in the Knowledge of Christ 
					– “The further the believer advances in the divine life, the 
					more he must necessarily become acquainted with Christ; for 
					his religious progress is the measure of his growing 
					knowledge of the Lord Jesus. We can only really advance in 
					grace, truth, and holiness, as we have close relations with 
					Jesus, constant transactions with the Saviour. Christ is our 
					life; and our growth in spiritual life is Christ increasing 
					within us. It is as utterly impossible to cherish a holy 
					desire, to conceive a heavenly thought, to perform a good 
					action, to conquer a single infirmity, or to baffle a 
					solitary temptation, apart from a direct communication with 
					Christ, as for the lungs to expand without air, or light to 
					exist without the sun.” –from The Precious Things of God 
					by Octavius Winslow (p.26-27). See Ephesians 1:17; 
					Philippians 3:8; 2Peter 3:18. 
					
					
					Topics: Sanctification, Knowledge of Christ, Spiritual 
					Growth
					
					
					Two-Fold Union with Christ 
					– “Is there not a deep significance in that expression of two-fold 
					union which our Lord so often uses, ‘Ye and me and I in 
					you’? [John 15:4-7] The branch that is in the vine has its 
					position; but only as the vine is in it, constantly 
					penetrating it with its sap and substances, does it have 
					power for fruitfulness. ‘If any man be in Christ he 
					is a new creature,’ [2Corinthians 5:17] he is regenerated, 
					he is justified. But what, let us inquire, can the apostle’s 
					words mean when in referring to such regenerated ones he 
					says, ‘My little children, of whom I travail in birth 
					again until Christ be formed in you’? [Galatians 4:19] 
					This later travail—these second birth-pangs for those who 
					had already been born of the Spirit—what can they signify? 
					Is it metaphor or is it a hint of some deeper work of divine 
					renewing for those who having begun in the Spirit are in 
					danger of seeking to be made perfect in the flesh? 
					[Galatians 3:3] –from The Two-Fold Life by A. J. 
					Gordon (p.11). 
					
					Topics: Sanctification, Union with Christ 
					June 5, 2006
					
					
					Failure of Prophecy Preaching 
					– “The doctrine of Christ’s return has fallen into neglect, on the 
					North American continent at least, and as far as I can 
					detect, today exercises no power whatever over the rank and 
					file of Bible-believing Christians. For this there may be a 
					number of contributing factors; but the chief one is, I 
					believe, the misfortune suffered by prophetic truth between 
					the two world wars when men without tears undertook to 
					instruct us in the writings of the tear-stained prophets. 
					Big crowds and big offerings resulted until events proved 
					the teachers wrong on too many points; then the reaction set 
					in and prophecy lost favor with the masses. This was a neat 
					trick of the devil and it worked too well. We should and 
					must learn that we cannot handle holy things carelessly 
					without suffering serious consequences.” –from God Tells 
					the Man Who Cares by A. W. Tozer (p.10). See 2Peter 
					3:10-14.
					
					
					Topics: Prophecy, Second Coming
					
					
					Victory over Sin by Crucifixion 
					– “God’s way of victory over sin is not through the suppression 
					of sinful desires, nor through the eradication of the 
					old nature, nor yet through the cleansing of inbred 
					sin. God’s way of victory is through crucifixion—deliverance 
					is only through death… Each time I come up against some 
					particular sin, let me there say: I died to that in Christ. 
					If it be a worldly attraction: I am crucified to the world 
					and the world unto me [Galatians 6:16]. If it be proud, 
					haughty self, again let me reckon: One died for all, all 
					died. Then I should not, and need not, live unto myself—I am 
					dead to my selfish pride and conceit and haughtiness 
					[2Corinthians 5:14-15]. Let me do as the two young women who 
					replied to an invitation to attend a ball: ‘We are very 
					sorry, but it will be impossible for us to attend. We died 
					last week. We are Christians.’ They had declared their 
					testimony in baptism the previous week, as dead, buried, 
					risen, and henceforth Christ-ones only.” –from Born 
					Crucified by L. E. Maxwell.
					
					Topics: Union with Christ, Baptism, Victory over Sin 
					 
					June 2, 2006
					
					
					Descent of Christ into Hell 
					– In England in 1597, “a controversy arose concerning the true 
					interpretation of that article in the Apostle’s Creed [and 
					in the Bible statements of Acts 2:27, 31] which related to 
					the descent of Christ into hell. Bishop Bilson, in some 
					sermons at Paul’s Cross, maintained the literal sense of the 
					passage; and affirmed that he went thither not to suffer, 
					but to wrest the keys of hell and death out of the hands of 
					the devil. This seems to have been the prevailing doctrine 
					of the times.” –from The History and Antiquities of the 
					Dissenting Churches: Volume One by Walter Wilson (p.37).
					
					
					
					Topics: Sufferings of Christ, Christ Descending to Hell, 
					Keys of Death and Hell
					
					
					All God’s Promises Wrapped up in One 
					– “The promise made to Abraham in Genesis 17:7 
					(‘And I will establish my covenant between me and thee…to be 
					a God unto thee’) has been frequently exemplified in later 
					times. 2Corinthians 6:16: ‘I will be their God.’ And it 
					includes all that God can promise, all that the soul can ask 
					or receive. As it is great folly to sit down with any 
					promise of God that is short of Himself, so it is as great a 
					folly to aspire after anything beyond Him. As a little piece 
					of gold may be beaten out to a great breadth, or drawn out 
					to an incredible length, yet it is still the same gold for 
					weight and substance, though it be more for use. So may this 
					comprehensive promise be drawn out into infinite 
					particulars, but still all of them are but this one: ‘I will 
					be thy God.’ The Almighty God will be your strength, the 
					all-wise God you conduct, and the everliving God your life.” 
					–from Practical Godliness: The Ornament of All Religion 
					by Vincent Alsop (p.52-53). 
					
					Topics: Promises of God, Presence of God 
					June 1, 2006
					
					
					Two Arms of God’s Authority – 
					“Power and wisdom are the two arms of authority; wisdom knows the 
					end, and directs the means; power executes the means 
					designed for such an end. The more splendid and strong those 
					are in any, the more authority results from thence, for the 
					conduct of others that are of an inferior orb; now God being 
					infinitely excellent in both, his ability and right to 
					management of the world cannot be suspected; the whole world 
					is but one commonwealth, whereof God is the monarch.” –from
					Existence and Attributes of God: Volume One by 
					Stephen Charnock (p.581). See 1Corinthians 1:24.
					
					
					
					E. M. Bounds on Seeking Experiences 
					
					– 
					E. M. Bounds wrote many books on prayer. “The 
					Preacher and Prayer, begun in 1905 and published in 
					1907, was the result of Bounds’ notes on insights on prayer 
					and information gathered from the revivals. As he recalled 
					and meditated upon the great spiritual movements of God and 
					made observations as a student of the Word of God and John 
					Wesley, he found weaknesses in the experiences that were 
					coming out of the meetings of 1904-1905. Revival and 
					spiritual awakenings often assault the emotions of people. 
					For this reason, Bounds felt that a foundation of biblical 
					doctrine must be taught to the new converts. Otherwise, they 
					would begin their spiritual walk seeking additional 
					experiences rather than seeking God. The great influx of 
					converts into the churches during the 1904-1905 Awakening 
					was a phenomenon to experience and study. But the effect of 
					the revival dissipated rapidly among the newly converted. 
					Those who were already Christians developed a deeper walk 
					and a greater understanding of the ways of God, but they 
					were negligent in sharing it effectively with the new 
					disciples.” –from E. M. Bounds by Darrel D. King 
					(p.137-138)