Feb. Quotes

February 20th, 2008

It matters not how oft you kneel
In attitude of prayer so ture,
Unless inside, where no man see,
Your very soul is kneeling too. - Mary L. O’Hara

Love cannot be forced, cannot be coaxed and teased. it comes out of Heaven, unasked an unsought. - Pearl Buck

He loves each of us, as if there were only one of us.
-St. Augustine

I accept life unconditionally, Life holds so much - so much to be happy about always. Most people ask for happiness on condition. Happiness can be felt only if you don’t set conditions.
- Artur Rubinsein

Lazarus, the Rich Man and the Bosom of Abraham.(part 1)

February 13th, 2008

Read Luke 16:19-31

I found three lessons in the parable of Lazarus and the rich man. The first is the lesson of the greed of the rich man and the failure to be concerned with the beggar at his door. the second is the fate of the poor, sick Lazarus and the reward of God. The third is the relationship of God (AKA Abraham) with both men.

In this lesson (part 1) I want to relate to the rich man and His greed and selfishness. It is because so many people of faith have fallen for the “prosperity gospel” that I feel that it is important that we be made aware that prosperity is not that God rewards us with material wealth as some teach today but that we prosper in the Word of God. It is not with money or property that we are to be rich, because those are things of the world and the flesh, but the things of the Spirit and the Glory of God.

Amos 6:1,5-9 reads: “Woe to those who are at ease in Zion, and to those who feel secure in the mountain of Samaria, the distinguished men of the foremost nations…Who improvise to the sound of the harp, and like David have composed for themselves, Who drink wine from sacrificial bowls while they anoint themselves with finest oils, yet have not grieved over the ruin of Joseph.”A clear call to those who are “comfortable’ in their walk and think that they are justified in acquiring vast wealth while at the same time, ignoring the plights of the world and thanking God they are not like the poor man in the back of the church. When John Wesley started to preach to the poor and the working masses, these self-righteous men of the church cast him out. They falsely believed that because they where rich, they were special to God and that the poor were sinners and deserved their fate. Jesus talked to the pharisees about the same thing, saying that their gift from their plenty was less to God than the meager offerings of the poor woman.