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	<title>Coleman Chapel Blog</title>
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	<description>A Spiritual Resource Ministry of the Coleman Memorial Chapel</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2012 22:48:52 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Good Friday Thoughts..</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=177</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=177#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2012 22:48:52 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[When Billy Graham was driving through a small southern town, he was stopped by a policeman and charged with speeding. Graham admitted his quilt, but was told by the officer that he would have to appear in court.
The judge asked, &#8220;Guilty, or not guilty?&#8221; When Graham pleaded guilty, the judge replied, &#8220;That&#8217;ll be ten dollars [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: small;">When Billy Graham was driving through a small southern town, he was stopped by a policeman and charged with speeding. Graham admitted his quilt, but was told by the officer that he would have to appear in court.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: small;">The judge asked, &#8220;Guilty, or not guilty?&#8221; When Graham pleaded guilty, the judge replied, &#8220;That&#8217;ll be ten dollars &#8212; a dollar for every mile you went over the limit.&#8221;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: small;">Suddenly the judge recognized the famous minister. &#8220;You have violated the law,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The fine must be paid&#8211;but I am going to pay it for you.&#8221; He took a ten dollar bill from his own wallet, attached it to the ticket, and then took Graham out and bought him a steak dinner! &#8220;That,&#8221; said Billy Graham, &#8220;is how God treats repentant sinners!&#8221; </span></p>
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		<title>Courage, Forgiveness..A Heart of Gold</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=175</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=175#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Mar 2012 02:54:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=175</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the most powerful prayers in the midst of suffering I have read was uncovered from the horrors of Ravensbruck concentration camp. Ravensbruck was a concentration camp built in 1939 for women. Over 90,000 women and children perished in Ravensbruck, murdered by the Nazis. Corrie Ten Boom, who wrote The Hiding Place, was imprisoned [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="line-height: 150%;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: small;">One of the most powerful prayers in the midst of suffering I have read was uncovered from the horrors of Ravensbruck concentration camp. Ravensbruck was a concentration camp built in 1939 for women. Over 90,000 women and children perished in Ravensbruck, murdered by the Nazis. Corrie Ten Boom, who wrote The Hiding Place, was imprisoned there too. The prayer, found in the clothing of a dead child, says:</p>
<p>O Lord, remember not only the men and woman of good will, but also those of ill will. But do not remember all of the suffering they have inflicted upon us: Instead remember the fruits we have borne because of this suffering, our fellowship, our loyalty to one another, our humility, our courage, our generosity, the greatness of heart that has grown from this trouble. When our persecutors come to be judged by you, let all of these fruits that we have borne be their forgiveness. </span></p>
<p style="line-height: 150%;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: small;">Only someone with a pure heart can emerge from such intense suffering and not curse his/her captors!  God alone can heal a wounded heart and fill it with love and forgiveness.  Have you been abused and suffered injustice?  Have you felt crushed and humiliated?  How are you coping and dealing with your suffering?  How&#8217;s that working for you?</span></p>
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		<title>Are You Facing a Hopeless Situation Today?</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=173</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=173#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Feb 2012 00:57:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Friends, this Sunday March 4th I will be talking about lifes hopeless situations!  Here is a brief excerpt of what I will be sharing.  I hope you can join us at Coleman Chapel..especially if you are feeling that you are entangled in a hopeless situation!
I am a soldier in the army of my God.
The Lord [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Friends, this Sunday March 4th I will be talking about lifes hopeless situations!  Here is a brief excerpt of what I will be sharing.  I hope you can join us at Coleman Chapel..especially if you are feeling that you are entangled in a hopeless situation!</p>
<p><span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: x-small;">I am a soldier in the army of my God.<br />
The Lord Jesus Christ is my commanding officer.<br />
The Holy Bible is my code of conduct, Faith, prayer and the Word are my weapons of warfare.<br />
I have been taught by the Holy Spirit&#8211;<br />
trained by experience, tried by adversity and tested by fire.<br />
I am a volunteer in this army, and I am enlisted for eternity.<br />
I will either retire in this army at the rapture or die in this army;<br />
but I will not get out, sell out, be talked out, or pushed out.<br />
I am faithful, reliable, capable, and dependable.<br />
If my God needs me, I am there.<br />
If He needs me in the Sunday school to teach the children,<br />
work with the youth, help adults or just sit and learn I’ll be there.<br />
He can use me because I am there!<br />
I am a soldier.<br />
I am not a baby. I do not need to be pampered, petted, primed up, pumped up,<br />
picked up, or pepped up.<br />
I am a soldier.<br />
No one has to call me, remind me, write me, visit me, entice me, or lure me.<br />
I am a soldier.<br />
I am not a wimp.<br />
I am in place saluting my King, obeying His orders, praising His name, and building His kingdom!<br />
No one has to send me flowers gifts, food, cards, candy or give me handouts.<br />
I do not need to be cuddled, cradled, cared for, or catered to.<br />
I am committed.<br />
I cannot have my feelings hurt bad enough to turn me around.<br />
I cannot be discouraged enough to turn me aside.<br />
I cannot lose enough to cause me to quit.<br />
If I end up with nothing, I will still come out ahead.<br />
I will win.<br />
My God has, and will continue, to supply all of my needs.<br />
I am more than a conqueror.<br />
I will always triumph.<br />
I can do all things through Christ.<br />
Devils cannot defeat me.<br />
People cannot disillusion me.<br />
Weather cannot weary me.<br />
Sickness cannot stop me.<br />
Battles cannot beat me.<br />
Money cannot buy me.<br />
Governments cannot silence me and hell cannot handle me.<br />
I am a soldier.<br />
Even death cannot destroy me.<br />
For when my Commander calls me from this battlefield He will promote me to Captain and then allow me to rule with Him.<br />
I am a soldier in the army and I’m marching, claiming victory.<br />
I will not give up.<br />
I will not turn around.<br />
I am a soldier marching, heaven bound. </span></p>
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		<title>God is Gracious!</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=171</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=171#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 17:34:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=171</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An atheist said, &#8220;If there is a God, may he prove himself by striking me dead right now.&#8221; Nothing happened. &#8220;You see, there is not God.&#8221; Another responded, &#8220;You&#8217;ve only proved that He is a gracious God.&#8221;
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An atheist said, &#8220;If there is a God, may he prove himself by striking me dead right now.&#8221; Nothing happened. &#8220;You see, there is not God.&#8221; Another responded, &#8220;You&#8217;ve only proved that He is a gracious God.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Ahhhhh, Thank God for His Patience!</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=153</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=153#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2012 21:01:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=153</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[How familiar are you with the patience of God?  How often do you try His patience and love?  Read on..There is no study of &#8220;our God&#8221; which more impressively presents to our view the Infinity of His nature than the study of His perfections; and among those perfections there is not one which, perhaps, more [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>How familiar are you with the patience of God?  How often do you try His patience and love?  Read on..There is no study of &#8220;our God&#8221; which more impressively presents to our view the Infinity of His nature than the study of His perfections; and among those perfections there is not one which, perhaps, more strikingly illustrates that Infinity than His patience. It is impossible to contemplate the fact of God&#8217;s patience with this fallen world, from the moment of man&#8217;s transgression until the present, and not be profoundly inspired with the truth– what but an Infinite Being could have borne with this revolted, ungodly race until now? The patience of all the created beings in heaven combined would long since have been exhausted had it been left to deal with sinful man. Such is the subject of these pages. Whether we view it in relation to the divine glory, or in its bearings upon the Church and the world, it is impossible, under the guidance of the Spirit of truth, to study the patience of God without deep instruction. Let us, in the further consideration of this subject, speak of the nature of God&#8217;s patience, its objects, and the holy lessons it teaches.</p>
<p>THE NATURE OF GOD&#8217;S PATIENCE<br />
The wide difference between the grace of patience in the Christian and the perfection of Patience in God will at once appear to the spiritual and reflective mind. In the Christian, patience is an implanted grace, wrought in the soul by the Holy Spirit, trained and exercised in the school of suffering and sorrow. But in God, patience is an essential attribute of His being, a part of His nature, yes, a part of Himself, so perfect that it needs no discipline for its culture. As with the divine perfection of love and of Hope, unfolded in the preceding chapters of this work, God could not be and cease to be the God of patience. If He could disrobe Himself of one perfection of His nature, He could of all; and what were this but to suppose it possible that he could undeify Himself? We are again reminded that, in all our dealings with God we deal with Infinity. The Lord&#8217;s people too frequently forget this. Would there be the limiting of God, the circumscribing of His power, patience, and love, did we more continually remember that, in coming to God in prayer, in looking to God for help, our faith has to deal with the Infinite, and therefore with the illimitable and the fathomless?</p>
<p>The sin of limiting the Holy One of Israel is one of the most God-dishonoring chargeable upon the believer. And yet, alas! How constant its commission! Is there a difficulty, a trial, or a need, in dealing with which we detect not the working of this evil within us- the tendency to compress the infinite within the finite, to circumscribe the boundless, to limit the Illimitable One?</p>
<p>But what is the Patience of God? It is the power of God over Himself. God&#8217;s patience with man is only surpassed by His patience with Himself. &#8220;The Lord is slow to anger,&#8221; and then it follows, &#8220;and great in power.&#8221; What is the inference we draw from these sublime words of the prophet but that, God&#8217;s patience towards His creatures is His power over Himself? It is, in the strong language of inspiration, &#8220;the hiding of His power.&#8221; But for the infinite restraint God puts upon Himself, this fallen world could not exist a moment. Mercy withholds judgment, goodness restrains justice, patience curbs power, and thus the patience of God is the salvation of man. &#8220;He that rules his spirit is better than he that takes a city.&#8221; God&#8217;s slowness of anger, His patience towards man, is the ruling of himself. That prince of Puritan writers, Charnock, thus puts it- &#8220;He that can restrain his anger is stronger than the Caesars and Alexanders of the world, that have filled the earth with their slain carcasses and ruined cities. By the same reason God&#8217;s slowness to anger is a greater argument of His power than the creating a world or the power of dissolving it by a word; in this He has a dominion over creatures, in the other over Himself. This is the reason he will not return to destroy; because &#8216;I am God, and not man.&#8217; &#8216;I am not so weak and impotent as man, who cannot restrain his anger.&#8217;</p>
<p>This is a strength possessed only by a God, wherein a creature is no more able to parallel Him than in any other; so that He may be said to be the Lord of Himself, as it is in the verse, that He is &#8216;the Lord of anger.&#8217; The end why God is patient is to show His power. &#8220;What if God, willing to show His wrath, and to make His power known, endures with much patience the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction&#8221; to show His wrath upon sinners, and His power over Himself, in bearing such indignities and forbearing punishment so long upon men, mere vessels of wrath fitted for destruction, of whom there was no hope of amendment? Had He immediately broken in pieces these vessels, His power had not so eminently appeared as it has done in tolerating them so long, that had provoked Him to take them off so often.</p>
<p>There is, indeed, the power of His anger and the power of His patience; and this power is more seen in His patience than in His wrath. It is no wonder that He who is above all is able to crush all; but it is a wonder that He that is provoked by all does not upon the first provocation rid His hands of all. This is the reason why He did bear such a weight of provocation from vessels of wrath, prepared for Him, that He might show what He was able to do, the lordship and royalty He had over Himself. The power of God is more manifest in His patience to a multitude of sinners than it could be in creating millions of worlds out of nothing; this was a power over Himself.&#8221;</p>
<p>Let it not, however, be inferred that, by thus representing the other divine perfections as yielding to that of patience, we are in any measure superseding their place or even compromising their dignity. For instance, there is no negation of His truthfulness in the exercise of His patience. In the threatenings of God there may be a delay in execution- patience restraining- and yet sooner or later God will vindicate His truthfulness by executing the threatening. God very rarely appoints the time when His judgments shall be displayed. He is therefore left free to send them when He chooses, without in the slightest degree compromising His veracity. In due time the judgment comes, though long delayed- patience intercepting it with its gentle and merciful restraint, and thus delaying its immediate and dire execution. When God, as in the case of Adam, said, &#8220;In the day you eat thereof you shall surely die,&#8221; and in the case of Nineveh, &#8220;Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be destroyed,&#8221; seems to fix a time for the outpouring of His judgment, it is generally accompanied with a condition upon the performance of which the execution of the sentence depends. Adam did not actually die the very day that he ate the forbidden fruit; nor was Nineveh destroyed at the end of the forty days fixed by God, because in both cases the patience of God waited for the accomplishment of the great ends He had in view in arresting the immediate execution of the threat.</p>
<p>Neither is the equity of God impeached by the exercise of His patience. The justice of God shall never know a cloud. He must cease to be God, if he cease to be just. The exercise, therefore, of His patience in no degree lessens His righteousness. He may &#8220;pass sentence against an evil work,&#8221; and yet not &#8220;execute it speedily&#8221; the infliction of punishment thus giving place to the restraint of patience, and yet remain a holy and a righteous Lord God. Would it argue the condoning of a fault on the part of a parent because, in the exercise of parental leniency, he did not immediately administer the punishment? Or, would it involve an impeachment of the justice of the sovereign if, in the exercise of the mercy of the crown, the criminal were not immediately hurried from the bar to the gibbet? And shall God be regarded as less holy or less just, if, in the exercise of His marvelous patience, he spares the guilty sinner, giving space for repentance? Oh, no! To a superficial eye He may seem to overlook wickedness because the sentence against it is not speedily executed; and the wicked man, presuming upon the arrest of judgment, may harden himself in his wickedness; nevertheless, God hates the sin though He bears long with the sinner, and sooner or later the wrath that has been thus long &#8216;treasuring up against the day of wrath&#8217; will overtake and overwhelm the ungodly.</p>
<p>God&#8217;s character should be seen and admired and reverenced by men as a whole. Were God&#8217;s judgment instantly to follow a crime, were punishment immediately to light upon a sin, there would be the hiding of His patience, which is an emanation of His goodness, and nothing would be seen but holiness in the awful display of justice. No, more. We believe that the exercise of divine patience is a wonderful balance to the greater luster of all the other divine perfections. When divine patience is, as it were, exhausted, and when holiness is vindicated and justice is displayed in the righteous and fearful doom of the sinner, the spotless purity of the one and the perfect equity of the other will shine forth with augmented luster in the eyes of all intelligent beings. The holiness of God will appear more holy, and the justice of God more just, when the flood-gates of His wrath, long closed, are opened, and His fiery justice, long pent up, is let loose, and the wicked are &#8216;driven away in their wickedness.&#8217; Then from every lip will ascend the exclamation, &#8220;You are righteous, O Lord, in that you have judged thus!&#8221;</p>
<p>We have thus shown that the patience of God is not a blind, unintelligent perfection, displayed at the expense of the related attributes of Jehovah; that, although it precede, it does not supersede, still less destroy them, but rather renders their manifestation the more palpable and their glory the more resplendent.</p>
<p>Such is the character of God as reflected by the single perfection of patience. And oh! how gracious and glorious does it appear! What a bright beam of mercy is patience! What a pure, sweet, and engaging emanation of goodness is patience! It is purely a truth of His own revelation. Had He not so revealed it, man, in the blindness which the fall has created, would have never discovered it. Listen to His declaration! &#8220;The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, patient, and abundant in goodness and truth&#8221; The patience of God seems like a central link in this golden chain of attributes. Mercy could have no room to act if patience did not prepare the way, and His truth and goodness in the promise of the Redeemer would not have been made manifest to the world if He had shot His arrows as soon as men committed these sins and deserved His punishment.</p>
<p>This perfection is expressed by other phrases; as, keeping silence; &#8220;These things have you done, and I kept silence.&#8221; This signifies to behave one&#8217;s self as a deaf and dumb man. &#8220;I did not fly in your face, as some do, with a great voice or for a light provocation, as if their life, honor, and estates were at stake. I did not presently call you to the bar, and pronounce judicial sentence upon you according to the law, but demeaned myself as if had been ignorant of your crimes, and had not been invested with the power of judging you for them. In the Chaldee, &#8216;I waited for your conversion.&#8217; God&#8217;s patience is the silence of His justice, and the first whisper of His mercy.&#8221; (Charnock)</p>
<p>Here let us consider, admire, and love! What a God is our God! When we remember how holy He is, &#8220;of purer eyes than to look upon iniquity;&#8221; when we remember how powerful He is, &#8220;He looks upon the hills and they tremble;&#8221; and when we remember how just He is, &#8220;a God without iniquity, just and right is He,&#8221; &#8220;and will by no means clear the guilty;&#8221; and then contemplate His infinite patience with sinners and with sin, bearing long with the one and keeping silence as to the other, oh! what a God is our God! Sinner! this is the God whose great patience you are trying to the utmost by your persistent sinfulness and impenitence, your determined unbelief and rebellion. Truly is this patience His dominion over Himself.</p>
<p>What an unfolding have we here of the goodness and mercy of God! of His character as a God delighting in mercy, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance! Sinner! &#8220;Do you despise the riches of His goodness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that the goodness of God leads you to repentance?&#8221; Oh that this truth might dissolve your heart, disarm your rebellion, and lay you at His feet subdued, conquered, won; henceforth to throw down your weapons and array beneath the all-constraining, all-victorious banner of His love- His disciple, His follower forever!</p>
<p>But we have yet to contemplate the patience of God in its clearest, its truest light. I refer to the Lord Jesus Christ as the foundation on which it rests, and the channel through which it flows. There could be no manifestation of the divine goodness, mercy, or patience, but for the work and death of Christ. All God&#8217;s perfections, outside of Christ, are united in their hatred of sin, and are pledged to punish the sinner. This must necessarily be so. If not harmonized in the administration of love, they must be united in the administration of justice. Had a Savior been provided for angels, then the great patience of God had been extended to them who &#8220;kept not their first estate;&#8221; but seeing that no such merciful provision was made for them, the moment they sinned they were hurled from the heights of glory into the abyss of woe, and are &#8220;reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day.&#8221;</p>
<p>But the moment man sinned, Christ saved man. When Adam fell, divine patience was instantly extended to the fallen sinner, and an arrest of judgment put in, Christ throwing Himself in the breach, exclaiming, &#8220;To my account let the sin be charged; upon me let the penalty fall; from me let the payment be exacted. I am the sinner&#8217;s Substitute; and if I must be arrested, and bound, and slain, let these elect souls on whose behalf I have from eternity covenanted to die, and have pledged myself to save, go their way.&#8221; Thus Christ, our Days-man, interposed for our relief, &#8220;giving Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet- smelling savor.&#8221; On no other ground than that of the Son of God engaging, in the eternal purposes of Jehovah, and actually in the fullness of time taking our nature, could God&#8217;s infinite patience and pardoning grace be extended to man.</p>
<p>In the everlasting covenant, He bound Himself to honor the law by His obedience, and to satisfy justice by His death, and so make it righteous and honorable in God to hold out His hand of patience all the day long to a sinful and gainsaying race. Finding in the person of Christ a divine dignity equal to the claims of His moral government, in His obedience a full honoring of the law, and in His sufferings and death a full satisfaction to justice, God could stand upon the Mount, and, while the thunder of His power rolled, and the lightning of His justice flashed, exclaim, &#8220;The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth,&#8221;- and thus it became righteous and honorable in God, to hold out His hand all the day long to a sinful and gainsaying race. It was on the ground of this covenant engagement that God could appear upon Mount Sinai, and amid those awful emblems of His majesty, declare Himself &#8220;The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity, transgressions, and sins.&#8221;</p>
<p>Let those who reject the idea of God&#8217;s everlasting love, and who ignore the covenant of grace, reflect upon these words. Let them pause and inquire, Had not Christ from eternity interposed as the Mediator anti Redeemer of men, upon what other grounds could God, amid these solemn displays of His holiness and power, have proclaimed Himself to sinners as a God &#8220;patient and abundant in goodness and truth?&#8221; If, under the law, God could so reveal Himself, how much is His patience heightened under the Gospel? Glorious as thus was Mount Sinai, it had no glory by reason of the glory that excelled on Mount Calvary, where the patience of God to sinful man culminated to its highest pitch of grandeur and glory.</p>
<p>Thus reasons the Apostle when arguing the superiority of the Gospel to the Legal dispensation- &#8220;That old system of law etched in stone led to death, yet it began with such glory that the people of Israel could not bear to look at Moses&#8217; face. For his face shone with the glory of God, even though the brightness was already fading away. Shouldn&#8217;t we expect far greater glory when the Holy Spirit is giving life? If the old covenant, which brings condemnation, was glorious, how much more glorious is the new covenant, which makes us right with God! In fact, that first glory was not glorious at all compared with the overwhelming glory of the new covenant. So if the old covenant, which has been set aside, was full of glory, then the new covenant, which remains forever, has far greater glory.&#8221;</p>
<p>If, then, the patience of our God was so manifest and glorious amid the dim shadows of the Legal dispensation, how much more real and glorious does it appear in the full blaze of the Gospel dispensation, and as exercised amid the sublime and impressive scenes of Calvary! In a word, if for the sake of the sacrifice of a lamb, or a goat, or a heifer, God would bear, in much patience, with men&#8217;s sin and rebellion, how much more honorable and fitting on His part to extend to sinners His patience on the ground of Christ&#8217;s only and complete sacrifice!</p>
<p>This explains the world-wide indirect influence of Christ&#8217;s Atonement. That Atonement has a particular reference to the elect Church of God; but, since it was necessary that the world should be kept in existence- a wicked, ungodly, mutinous world though it is- in order that God might take out of it His chosen people, the indirect effect of the sacrifice of Christ is, as to enable God to &#8220;bear with much patience the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction!&#8221;</p>
<p>Oh, the marvelous blessings that flow from the death of Christ! Oh, the variety of precious fruit that grows upon the cross of Calvary! So marvelous, so strange and unheard of a thing was it that, the incarnate God, the Maker of all worlds, the Creator of all beings, should die, it would seem impossible that there should be a spot in the universe, or a being on the globe, to whom the far-reaching influence of Christ&#8217;s death should not extend in some of its countless effects, direct or indirect, either of saving mercy, or of restraining and sparing power. In this sense the Divine Merchantman &#8220;purchased the field&#8221;- the world- for the sake of the &#8220;pearl&#8221;- the Church- &#8221; hidden in that field.&#8221; And so, the patience of God in sparing the world, for the sake of the Church He intended to take out of it, is an indirect result of the Savior&#8217;s suffering and death upon the cross. Thus, in the strong language of the Apostle, He is described as &#8220;the Savior of all men, especially of those who believe.&#8221;</p>
<p>For this reason God spared the old world while the ark was preparing. Long and patiently He bore with it, its wickedness crying mightily to heaven for judgment. But the framework of the ark cast a benign and restraining shadow upon the ungodly race. And so long as the vessel was building, the wicked ante-diluvians dwelt peacefully and securely beneath its shade. It was the indirect merciful influence of the ark that spared them so long from instant and utter destruction. But when the ark was complete, and the family for whom it was built were safe beneath its roof, and God had shut them in, the fountains of the great deep were broken up, and the flood came and swept them all away.</p>
<p>So God bears with much patience a wicked world now. The shallow of the cross preserves it! but, when the purposes of mercy according to the election of grace, are accomplished, and the mystery of God shall be finished, divine patience will give place to divine wrath, and He will thoroughly purge His floor, and gather His wheat into His garner; but He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire. The ark afloat- the church saved- the purposes of God accomplished- the divine patience, that for so many centuries bore with our ungodly world, will cease; and divine justice, long restrained, will blot it from the universe, superseding it by &#8220;a new heaven and a new earth, in which will dwell righteousness.&#8221;</p>
<p>But if such are the indirect blessings from the death of Christ- the chief of which is God&#8217;s unwearied patience with the wicked; what must be the greatness and preciousness of the blessings directly and immediately resulting to the Church of God! As a believer in the Lord Jesus, you have a personal and inalienable interest in a present salvation and in a future glory, all flowing from His atoning death. The death of Christ places you, if a believer, in the position of a sinner saved now. Yours is a present salvation, a present pardon, a present justification, a present adoption. But how few realize this to be their standing! How few walk in the happy enjoyment of it as those whose sins are forgiven, whose souls are accepted, whose persons are adopted!</p>
<p>How few, in the language of the prophet, &#8220;possess these possessions.&#8221; But the word of God fully justifies this view of a present salvation. Listen to its language. &#8220;I write unto you, little children, because ,our sins are forgiven for His name&#8217;s sake &#8221; Observe, it is a present forgiveness! &#8221; To the praise of the glory of His grace, wherein He has made us accepted in the Beloved.&#8221; Observe, it is a present acceptance! &#8220;Beloved, now are we the sons of God&#8221; Mark, it is a present adoption! &#8220;There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus &#8221; Notice, it is a present acquittal! Such is the authority upon which we earnestly urge you to realize your present standing in Christ.</p>
<p>Let it not be with you a future question. If you are a slave emancipated, a criminal acquitted, a sinner pardoned, an alien adopted, a wanderer reclaimed, then realize it, and let your whole life, amid all its trials and sorrows and battles, be as a sweet and pleasant psalm of praise and thanksgiving to the God of patience who bore with you so long, to the Savior of sinners whose grace called you at last, and to the Spirit of holiness who, by His work of progressive sanctification, is gradually fitting you for the inheritance of the saints in light.</p>
<p>But who are the OBJECTS of God&#8217;s patience? They include both the sinner and the saint. First, there is God&#8217;s patience with the UNGODLY. This He shows in various ways. By the warnings which precede His judgments. God never acts impulsively, His justice is never hasty in its execution. The threat is issued, the warning is given, the rod is shaken, but the smiting tarries. Patience waits, mercy pleads, power restrains, and the sentence against the evil work is not executed speedily. As there is space between the lightning&#8217;s flash and the thunder&#8217;s roll, so space is afforded the sinner between the warning and the judgment, the threatening and the execution. God speaks twice in His mercy; and once in judgment. He gives the sinner space for repentance. Sinner! all this is verified in you! The warning is gone forth, but the executions lingers. God is speaking once in warning, twice in mercy. Judgment slumbers, but forbearance is awake. The indictment is laid, but the trial is postponed; the verdict is given, but the sentence is delayed. And why? That God&#8217;s infinite patience might induce you to turn from your wickedness and live; to renounce your sins and flee from the wrath to come. Delay no longer! Think of all the past illustrations of God&#8217;s patience; recall the many instances in which His goodness has interposed between your sin and its consequences, your aggravated provocation and His tremendous wrath.</p>
<p>Another example of God&#8217;s forbearance with the sinner is seen in the many ways He employs to persuade him to repentance, before He administers the chastisement. He is intent upon affording both the time and the means for repentance. One of the fathers, in illustrating this idea, remarks that, God took six days to create the world, but was seven days in destroying Jericho. He was quick to build up, but slow to pull down. To the sinner going on in his rebellion, He says, &#8220;How shall I give you up? how shall I deliver you, Israel?&#8221; As of old, so it is now; &#8220;But He, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity, and destroyed them not; yes, many a time turned He His anger away, and did not stir up all His wrath.&#8221; The original is more expressive; &#8220;Many a time He recalled, or ordered His anger to return again,&#8221; as if He hesitated to punish, was irresolute what to do.</p>
<p>What God did aforetime for Jezebel, He does now; &#8220;I gave her space to repent.&#8221; Impenitent sinner! God is giving you space, or time, to repent; and except you do repent, like the wicked prophetess, you must perish. Do you ask, &#8220;How can I repent?&#8221; Fall at the mercy-seat, and seek the grace from Heaven. &#8220;Christ is exalted a Prince and Savior, to give repentance.&#8221; Precious gift! a princely gift, not a purchase; a divine principle wrought in the heart by the power of the Spirit. One stroke of the rod of His grace, and, like the rock which Moses smote, your heart will be broken, and the waters of godly penitence for sin will gush forth, and flow in a hallowed stream beneath the cross. Remember, the two distinctive elements of conversion are, &#8220;repentance towards God, and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ&#8221; Oh! seek truly, earnestly, perseveringly, these two royal gifts of God. Apart from their possession, there can be no real conversion now, and, consequently, after death, no heaven.</p>
<p>We will only further remark that, God shows His patience with sinners in lessening and softening the judgment when it comes. He does not deal with the sinner after his sins, nor reward him according to his iniquities. The stroke is lighter than the crime. God does not, in His punishment, exhaust the vials of His displeasure. The judgment is less heavy than the threat, and the punishment less severe than the provocation. The sword is bathed in heaven- so gentle, so slight the wound. Oh! what a God is our God, even to His enemies! Behold, therefore, the goodness and severity of God; His goodness tempering, softening severity; His severity upholding and vindicating the holiness of goodness.</p>
<p>Will not this view of God&#8217;s dealings dissolve you into penitence, gratitude, and love? Will you continue sinning against such a Being? Will you persist in your rebellion against such a God? &#8220;Don&#8217;t you realize how kind, tolerant, and patient God is with you? Or don&#8217;t you care? Can&#8217;t you see how kind he has been in giving you time to turn from your sin? But no, you won&#8217;t listen. So you are storing up terrible punishment for yourself because of your stubbornness in refusing to turn from your sin. For there is going to come a day of judgment when God, the just judge of all the world, will judge all people according to what they have done.&#8221;</p>
<p>Equally great is the patience of God WITH HIS OWN PEOPLE. In one point of light it is even greater than in the case of the ungodly. God has to put up with greater provocation in the saint than in the sinner, and, consequently, His patience and patience towards His people is greater. The sin of the unconverted is the natural growth of their fallen and unrenewed nature; the sin of the converted is against grace, and pardon, and love. The rebellion against God of the converted is that of a child. The sin of the one is that of all unforgiven soul; the sin of the other is that of one all whose sin is blotted out. When, therefore, we consider what God has done for us, what Jesus has endured for us, what the Holy Spirit has wrought in us, and then contrast this with our deep ingratitude, our base murmurings, our countless backslidings, our cruel unbelief and secret rebellion, with the little we do for God and suffer for Christ, and with the sin and infirmities with which that little is mixed and defiled, truly we must feel that the patience of our God towards the saint is greater than His patience towards the sinner.</p>
<p>Oh! the tenderness, the graciousness of the Lord&#8217;s patience with His people! How patiently he hears with their ungrateful repinings, with their secret rebellion, with their cold love, with their cruel unbelief, with their continuous and aggravated backslidings! Truly, the patience of God, after grace, is greater than His patience before grace. How should this thought humble us in the dust! How should it subdue our rebellious spirit, break our hard heart, and lead us, in every fresh remembrance, to the blood of Christ, to wash in the fountain open for sin and uncleanness!</p>
<p>It is only as we keep fast by this cleansing Fountain, wash in it daily, that we shall leave spiritual discernment to see when we sin against God&#8217;s patience, and how we provoke the just chastisement of His fatherly displeasure. Oh for more simple coming to the blood of sprinkling! Oh for more constant bathing in the open fountain! This alone will keep the heart clean, the conscience tender, the mind quickly susceptible of the slightest oscillation of its thoughts, imaginations, and desires towards sin. Never should a single day pass in the experience of a child of God without washing in the blood. The blood should be upon all his religious duties and engagements and services. Everything should be purged, and purified, and perfumed with the blood of Jesus. This will cleanse, sanctify, and beautify all we are and all we do, and render the smallest offering of faith, and the lowliest service of love, a sacrifice and an offering to God of a sweet-smelling savor. Such is our God, the God of patience! Many are the LESSONS we may learn, and the BLESSINGS we may glean, from this instructive and fruitful subject.</p>
<p>Does God exercise patience towards us? Then let us learn to bear, with Christian patience, all His disciplinary dealings with us. If God is patient with our sins and misdoings against Him, we may well receive with uncomplaining meekness and submission all the trials and corrections, the rebukes and sufferings, His wisdom and love righteously lays upon us. And yet how uneasy are we beneath the yoke! how we kick against the goads! and allow our poor, puny will, to rise in opposition to His will, supremely wise and infinitely holy!</p>
<p>Are you a child of sorrow or of suffering? Is our God leading you, so blind and helpless, in a way you know not, and in paths you had not known? Is He pressing to your lips a cup of woe before untasted; and tasting which, you turn away, and exclaim, &#8220;Let this cup pass from me?&#8221; Think of the God of patience, and be still. Know that He who is wise is counseling you, He who is strong is leading you, He who is love is directing, and shaping, and tinting the whole scene through which, with a skillful hand and in the integrity of His heart, He is conducting you home to glory. His is a school where the grace of patience receives its highest culture, its purest, and host beauteous development.</p>
<p>&#8220;Tribulation works patience,&#8221; and patience, in its turn, works our experience. Afflicted saint, &#8220;you have need of patience;&#8221; and He who sends the affliction knows your need, and knowing, will supply it, by giving you abundantly of this soul-sanctifying, God-glorifying grace of holy patience. Thus, by meeting your calamities with calamities, by waiting humbly the issue of events, the mystery of which you cannot penetrate, and the direction of which you cannot control, and by waiting in the patience of hope for that eternal life which God, who cannot lie, promised to all who believe in Christ, and for the enjoyment of which present suffering is perfecting you, &#8220;patience will have its perfect work, lacking nothing,&#8221; and &#8220;in patience you shall possess your soul.&#8221;</p>
<p>Is your path dark and lonely? are your prayers still unanswered? is the promise still unfulfilled and the blessing still withheld? Now is the time to &#8220;rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him,&#8221; and by so doing glorify your Father who is in heaven. Thus will your experience and your testimony be that of David, &#8220;I waited patiently for the Lord to help me, and he turned to me and heard my cry. He lifted me out of the pit of despair, out of the mud and the mire. He set my feet on solid ground and steadied me as I walked along. He has given me a new song to sing, a hymn of praise to our God.&#8221;</p>
<p>Let us learn from the God of patience a patient spirit TOWARDS OTHERS. In this grace we may truly be &#8220;Imitators of God.&#8221; The Apostle&#8217;s exhortation is one you have need to bear in mind, &#8220;Be patient toward all men.&#8221; There is much sin in the ungodly; and what is yet harder to bear, of infirmity in the saints, which calls for the constant exercise of this grace of the Spirit. But, what a divine and illustrious example of this grace have we in Jesus! &#8220;He was led as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearer is dumb, so opened He not His mouth.&#8221; &#8220;Who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, He threatened not.&#8221; Learn, then, to bear with uncomplaining patience the weaknesses and infirmities, the slights and woundings of your fellows- the hatred of the world and the smitings of the Church– looking to the God of patience for strength and grace silently and patiently to bear it. And, whether you are buffeted for your faults, or are misinterpreted and censured for your well-doing, you take it patiently, this is acceptable to God.</p>
<p>&#8220;Lord, and am I yet alive,<br />
Not in torment, not in hell?<br />
Still does Your good Spirit strive<br />
With the chief of sinners dwell?<br />
Tell it unto sinners, tell,<br />
I am, I am out of hell!<br />
Yes, I still lift up my eyes,<br />
Will not of Your love despair,<br />
Still in spite of sin I rise,<br />
Still I bow to You in prayer.<br />
Tell it unto sinners, tell,<br />
I am, I am out of hell!<br />
Oh, the length and breadth of love!<br />
Jesus, Savior, can it be?<br />
All Your mercy&#8217;s height I prove,<br />
All the depth is seen in me.<br />
Tell it unto sinners, tell,<br />
I am, I am out of hell!<br />
See a bush that burns with fire,<br />
Unconsumed amid the flame!<br />
Turn aside the sight admire,<br />
I the living wonder am.<br />
Tell it unto sinners, tell, I am,<br />
I am out of hell!<br />
See a stone that hangs in air,<br />
See a spark in ocean live!<br />
Kept alive with death so near,<br />
I to God the glory give.<br />
Ever tell- to sinners tell,<br />
I am, I am out of hell!&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Future Reality?</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=132</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=132#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Aug 2011 15:59:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Thanksgiving  2022
&#8220;Winston, come into the dining room,  it&#8217;s time to eat,&#8221; Julia yelled to
her husband. &#8220;In a minute, honey, it&#8217;s a tie  score,&#8221; he answered. Actually
Winston wasn&#8217;t very interested in the traditional  holiday football game
between Detroit and Washington.
Ever since the government passed the  Civility in Sports Statute of 2017,
outlawing tackle football for its &#8220;unseemly  violence&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;"><span style="font-family: &quot;Arial&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;;"><span style="font-size: small;">Thanksgiving  2022</p>
<p>&#8220;Winston, come into the dining room,  it&#8217;s time to eat,&#8221; Julia yelled to<br />
her husband. &#8220;In a minute, honey, it&#8217;s a tie  score,&#8221; he answered. Actually<br />
Winston wasn&#8217;t very interested in the traditional  holiday football game<br />
between Detroit and Washington.</p>
<p>Ever since the government passed the  Civility in Sports Statute of 2017,<br />
outlawing tackle football for its &#8220;unseemly  violence&#8221; and the &#8220;bad example<br />
it sets for the rest of the world,&#8221; Winston was  far less of a football fan<br />
than he used to be. Two-hand touch wasn&#8217;t nearly as  exciting.</p>
<p>Yet it wasn&#8217;t the game that Winston was uninterested in. It was  more the<br />
thought of eating another Tofu Turkey. Even though it was the best type  of<br />
Veggie Meat available after the government revised the American Anti-Obesity  <br />
Act of 2018, adding fowl to the list of federally-forbidden foods, (which  <br />
already included potatoes, cranberry sauce and mince-meat pie), it wasn&#8217;t  <br />
anything like real turkey. And ever since the government officially changed<br />
the  name of &#8220;Thanksgiving Day&#8221; to &#8220;A National Day of Atonement&#8221; in 2020 to  <br />
officially acknowledge the Pilgrims&#8217; historically brutal treatment of Native<br />
 Americans, the holiday had lost a lot of its luster.</p>
<p>Eating in the dining  room was also a bit daunting. The unearthly gleam of<br />
government-mandated  fluorescent light bulbs made the Tofu Turkey look even<br />
weirder than it actually  was, and the room was always cold. Ever since<br />
Congress passed the Power  Conservation Act of 2016, mandating all<br />
thermostats-which were monitored and  controlled by the electric company-be kept at 68 degrees, every room on the  north side of the house was barely tolerable<br />
throughout the entire winter.  </p>
<p>Still, it was good  getting together with family. Or at least most of the<br />
family. Winston missed his  mother, who passed on in October, when she had<br />
used up her legal allotment of  live-saving medical treatment. He had many<br />
heated conversations with the  Regional Health Consortium, spawned when the<br />
private insurance market finally  went bankrupt, and everyone was forced into<br />
the government health care program.  And though he demanded she be kept on<br />
her treatment, it was a futile effort.  &#8221;The RHC&#8217;s resources are limited,&#8221;<br />
explained the government bureaucrat Winston  spoke with on the phone. &#8220;Your<br />
mother received all the benefits to which she was  entitled. I&#8217;m sorry for your<br />
loss.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ed couldn&#8217;t make it either. He had  forgotten to plug in his electric car<br />
last night, the only kind available after  the Anti-Fossil Fuel Bill of 2021<br />
outlawed the use of the combustion engines-for  everyone but government<br />
officials. The fifty mile round trip was about ten miles  too far, and Ed didn&#8217;t<br />
want to spend a frosty night on the road somewhere  between here and there.</p>
<p>Thankfully, Winston&#8217;s brother, John, and  his wife were flying in.<br />
Winston made sure that the dining room chairs had extra cushions for the<br />
occasion. No one complained more than John about the pain of sitting down so<br />
soon after the government-mandated cavity searches at  airports, which<br />
severely aggravated his hemorrhoids. Ever since a terrorist successfully<br />
smuggled a cavity bomb onto a jetliner, the TSA told Americans the  added<br />
&#8220;inconvenience&#8221; was an &#8220;absolute necessity&#8221; in order to stay &#8220;one step  ahead of the<br />
terrorists.&#8221; Winston&#8217;s own body had grown accustomed to such  probing ever<br />
since the government expanded their scope to just about anywhere a  crowd<br />
gathered, via Anti-Profiling Act of 2022. That law made it a crime to  single<br />
out any group or individual for &#8220;unequal scrutiny,&#8221; even when probable  <br />
cause was involved. Thus, cavity searches at malls, train stations, bus depots,  <br />
etc., etc., had become almost routine. Almost.</p>
<p>The Supreme Court is reviewing the statute, but most Americans expect a<br />
Court composed of six progressives and  three conservatives to leave the law<br />
intact. &#8220;A living Constitution is extremely flexible,&#8221; said the Court&#8217;s<br />
eldest member, Elena Kagan. &#8220;Europe has had laws  like this one for years. We<br />
should learn from their example,&#8221; she added.</p>
<p>Winston&#8217;s thoughts turned to his own children. He got along fairly well<br />
with his 12-year-old daughter, Brittany, mostly because she ignored him.  <br />
Winston had long ago surrendered to the idea that she could text anyone at any  <br />
time, even during Atonement Dinner. Their only real confrontation had<br />
occurred  when he limited her to 50,000 texts a month, explaining that was all he<br />
could  afford. She whined for a week, but got over it.</p>
<p>His 16-year-old son, Jason, was another matter altogether. Perhaps it was<br />
the constant bombarding he got in public school that global warming, the<br />
bird flu, terrorism or any of a number of other calamities were &#8220;just around<br />
the corner,&#8221; but Jason had  developed a kind of nihilistic attitude that<br />
ranged between simmering surliness  and outright hostility. It didn&#8217;t help that<br />
Jason had reported his father to the police for smoking a cigarette in the<br />
house, an act made criminal by the Smoking  Control Statute of 2018, which<br />
outlawed smoking anywhere within 500 feet of  another human being. Winston<br />
paid the $5,000 fine, which might have been considered excessive before the<br />
American dollar became virtually worthless as a result of QE13. The latest<br />
round of quantitative easing the federal government initiated was, once<br />
again, to &#8220;spur economic growth.&#8221; This time they promised to push unemployment<br />
below its years-long rate of 18%, but Winston was not  particularly hopeful.</p>
<p>Yet the family had a lot for which to be thankful, Winston thought, before<br />
remembering it was a Day of Atonement. At least he had his memories. He<br />
felt a twinge of sadness when he realized his children would never know what<br />
life was like in the Good Old Days, long before  government promises to make<br />
life &#8220;fair for everyone&#8221; realized their full  potential. Winston, like so<br />
many of his fellow Americans, never realized how  much things could change<br />
when they didn&#8217;t happen all at once, but little by  little, so people could<br />
get used to them.</p>
<p>He wondered what might have  happened if the public had stood up while<br />
there was still time, maybe back  around 2011, when all the real nonsense<br />
began.. &#8220;Maybe we wouldn&#8217;t be where we are today if we&#8217;d just said &#8216;enough is<br />
enough&#8217; when we had the chance,&#8221; he  thought.</p>
<p>Maybe so, Winston. Maybe so.</span></span></p>
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		<title>The &#8220;High&#8221; of Feeling Important and Needed!</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=127</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=127#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 04 Jun 2011 21:17:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Steven Covey comments; Some of us get so used to the adrenaline rush of handling crises that we become dependent on it for a sense of excitement and energy. How does urgency feel? Stressful? Pressured? Tense? Exhausting? Sure. But let’s be honest. It’s also sometimes exhilarating. We feel useful. We feel successful. We feel validated. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Steven Covey comments; Some of us get so used to the adrenaline rush of handling crises that we become dependent on it for a sense of excitement and energy. How does urgency feel? Stressful? Pressured? Tense? Exhausting? Sure. But let’s be honest. It’s also sometimes exhilarating. We feel useful. We feel successful. We feel validated. And we get good at it. Whenever there’s trouble, we ride into town, pull out the six shooter, do the varmit in, blow the smoke off the gun barrel, and ride into the sunset like a hero. It brings instant results and instant gratification.<br />
We get a temporary high from solving urgent and important crises. Then when the importance isn’t there, the urgency fix is so powerful we are drawn to do anything urgent, just to stay in motion. People expect us to be busy, overworked. It’s become a status symbol in our society - if we’re busy, we’re important; if we’re not busy, we’re almost embarrassed to admit it. Busyness is where we get our security. It’s validating, popular and pleasing. It’s also a good excuse for not dealing with the first things in our lives.<br />
&#8220;I’d love to spend quality time with you, but I have to work. There’s this deadline. It’s urgent. Of course you understand.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;I just don’t have time to exercise. I know it’s important, but there are so many pressing things right now. Maybe when things slow down a little.&#8221;"</p>
<p>There comes a time in and throughout our lives when we need to evaluate our priorities.  We need to perform a meticulous inventory of what makes us tick and why.  We need to be bold, honest and willing to attack and defeat those enemies of our time and strength that would shrivel our minds, spirits and souls.  Where do you need to begin today to deepen your relationship with Jesus Christ?  Where do you need to take control or reclaim the precious moments and experiences of your life that have been stolen or are slipping away?</p>
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		<title>Memories..</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=125</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=125#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jun 2011 23:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=125</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Leslie Weatherhead tells of a little boy who was admitted to an orphanage after his parents were killed. One of the first items on the agenda was to find him a new set of clothes. He was given a new pair of pants, a new shirt, and a pair of shoes that shinned as he [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Leslie Weatherhead tells of a little boy who was admitted to an orphanage after his parents were killed. One of the first items on the agenda was to find him a new set of clothes. He was given a new pair of pants, a new shirt, and a pair of shoes that shinned as he saw his face in its glow.</p>
<p>Lastly, he was offered a new hat. But he refused to take it. He hung on to his worse- for the-wear—hat. Finally the Sister was able to coax him into trying on the new cap. He tried it on, liked it, but then did something very funny. He reached inside his old cap and tore the lining out and placed it in his pocket.</p>
<p>Noticing the Sister had a puzzled look on her face, he said said, &#8220;The lining is a part of my mother’s dress; it’s all I’ve got left of her and somehow it seems to bring her back.&#8221;</p>
<p>Memories like nuggets of gold are treasures to be valued!  Let the people that you hold close to your heart &#8220;know&#8221; how important they are to you.  Maybe you haven&#8217;t shared your deepest feelings with those that you love the most.  Today would be a good day to say what&#8217;s on your heart.  You never know about tomorrow..</p>
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		<title>Sacrifice!</title>
		<link>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=123</link>
		<comments>http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=123#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 May 2011 00:17:22 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.colemanchapel.org/blog/?p=123</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Chuck Swindoll, in his book, &#8220;Living Above the Level of Mediocrity,&#8221; tells about a church in the Soviet Union a few years ago that was forced to meet secretly because the holding of house church services was illegal.
They tried to be as inconspicuous as possible as they gathered on Sunday to worship the Lord, so [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Chuck Swindoll, in his book, &#8220;Living Above the Level of Mediocrity,&#8221; tells about a church in the Soviet Union a few years ago that was forced to meet secretly because the holding of house church services was illegal.</p>
<p>They tried to be as inconspicuous as possible as they gathered on Sunday to worship the Lord, so they came at different times &amp; casually walked into the house until they had all arrived. Then they would close the doors, pull the curtains, &amp; quietly worship the Lord.</p>
<p>But one Lord’s Day, right in the midst of their worship service, two soldiers broke into the room, &amp; at gunpoint lined the Christians up against the wall. One shouted, &#8220;If you wish to renounce your faith in Jesus Christ, leave now!&#8221;</p>
<p>Two or three quickly left, then another, &amp; then two more. Again the soldier spoke, &#8220;This is your last chance. Either leave now &amp; renounce your faith in Christ, or stay &amp; suffer the consequences.&#8221; Another left, &amp; then another, almost hiding their faces in shame as they went out.</p>
<p>But the rest stood their ground, children standing beside their parents, trembling, some even crying as their parents stood with their hands in the air, fully expecting to be gunned down or imprisoned.</p>
<p>After all had left who chose to flee, the other soldier closed the doors, looked back at those who stood against the wall &amp; said, &#8220;Keep your hands up - but this time in praise to our Lord Jesus Christ. We, too, are Christians.&#8221;</p>
<p>The two soldiers explained that some time earlier they had been sent to another house church to arrest the Christians there. But in the process, they had heard the gospel &amp; had accepted Jesus as their Lord &amp; Savior, too. But they explained, &#8220;We have learned that unless people are willing to die for their faith, they cannot be fully trusted.&#8221;</p>
<p style="font-size: smaller;"><em>For more from Chuck, visit http://www.insight.org</em></p>
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