OldGobbler

OG Gear Store
Sum Toy
Dave Smith
Wood Haven
North Mountain Gear
North Mountain Gear
turkeys for tomorrow

News:

only use regular PayPal to provide purchase protection

Main Menu

Devotion, Tuesday March 25, 2014

Started by Duke0002, March 24, 2014, 10:50:52 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Duke0002

Another good one from Spurgeon, with a few adjustments.  Study it carefully.

===================================================

"Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am." — John 17:24

O death! why do you touch the tree beneath its spreading branches where someone weary is resting?  Why do you snatch away the excellent ones of the earth, in whom is all our delight? If you must use your axe, use it upon the trees which yield no fruit; you might be thanked then. But why wilt you fell the goodly cedars of Lebanon? O stay thine axe, and spare the righteous. But no, it must not be that way. 

Death smites the goodliest of our friends; the most generous, the most prayerful, the most holy, the most devoted must die. And why? It is through Jesus' prevailing prayer  -"Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am." It is that which bears them on eagle's wings to heaven. Every time a believer mounts from this earth to paradise, it is an answer to Christ's prayer.

A good old saint remarks, "Many times Jesus and his people pull against one another in prayer. You bend your knee in prayer and say 'Father, I will that thy saints be with me where I am.'  But Christ says, 'Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am.'"[/b]

Thus the disciple is at cross-purposes with his Lord. The soul cannot be in both places: your beloved one cannot be with Christ and with you too.  Now, which pleader shall win the day? If you had your choice; if the King should step from his throne, and say, "Here are two supplicants praying in opposition to one another, which shall be answered?"  Oh! I am sure, though it were agony, you would start from your feet, and say, "Jesus, not my will, but thine be done." You would give up your prayer for your loved one's life, if you could realize the thoughts that Christ is praying in the opposite direction  -"Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am." Lord, you shall have them. By faith we let them go.

=======================================================

-Dale

misfire

Very good message Dale, thanks brother
Pray as if everything depends on God, work like everything depends on you

www.misfiregamecalls.net