If you have ever felt unworthy or unqualified to believe that God will fulfill great purposes in your life, please allow me to introduce you to Abram. What you may not know about him is that at the time of his dramatic call from the Lord, he is living in idolatry. Abram is not yet worshiping the one true God; he is following many "little g" gods along with the rest of his family (see Joshua 24:2). He does not know the Creator of the universe, who is about to unleash his power into his destiny. In short, when our story begins, Abram is an unbeliever.
ACK! What are you saying?
Believing God | Today's Christian Woman
I was first drawn to this article because of something that has occupied my thoughts for most of the summer. I've been sifting through the things I'll call core values or beliefs and attempting to measure my commitment to them. Weird stuff...and disturbing too.
Like Occupy Washington, this is no welcome squatter of my personal space.
Let's cut to the chase here.
Perhaps what I have identified as core values or beliefs could more accurately be called ideals or ideas. Some (of which I used to apply as the irrevocable Law of the Medes & Persians) have since become utterly irrelevant.
Ouch.
Age, circumstance and children have a way of bringing these things to bear.
My beloved and I knew we'd be growing up with our kids but the degree to which it would be necessary (!) is still so shocking.
Back to the article:
Abram wasn't singled out for this privilege because of his greatness. On the contrary.
He got a new name, a new identity, and a newly assigned life when God called him into covenant.
Abrahams claim to fame according to Hebrews Hall of Faithers in chapter eleven, is not that he believed in God but that he believed God.
Do you understand the difference?
The song that pops to mind (and you just know there is ALWAYS a song) is Trust and Obey~
"for there's no other way to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey".
I've been singing this song since I was a toddler for crying out loud. I should have stayed that age.
Developing into responsible adulthood too often becomes code for: I've got it figured out. I can do this myself.
And here's the other thing I have to keep learning over and over again:
STOP MAKING HEROES OUT OF BIBLE FIGURES and evaluating their performance as if it were something to be measured by. They are merely examples of God reaching down into messy lives with a mercy and grace and love that defies understanding.
It isn't about them or you or me.
It's about GOD the Creator who made us, shapes us, calls us and carries us. 24/7 without exception.
I have just discovered the newest release of Sally Lloyd Jones: Thoughts to Make Your Heart Sing
If I told you it was for my grandkids, it'd be a half-truth. No. I buy them by the boxload; to help me get back to basics, to wrap my head around simple bible truths and to stop COMPLICATING things!
Faith 101 if you will.
Hit the link and browse through this masterpiece with me. It truly does make your heart sing and your eyes brim over at the reality of belonging to Him and becoming more and more aware of His never stopping, never giving up, unbreaking, always and forever love.
Thoughts to Make Your Heart Sing Video
The Bible: HIS story (with divine fingerprints tracing all the others of the Bible) combined with Sally's gift of storytelling, brings home a beauty barring none.
Suffering Honestly: Philip Yancey’s Undone
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Editor’s Note: Undone is acclaimed author Philip Yancey’s latest book,
published by Rabbit Room Press. In it, he renders 17th-century poet John
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