Showing posts with label awe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awe. Show all posts

Thursday, May 1, 2025

God Answers You When You Ask Questions - God hears you when you pray, and he answers you when you ask questions. He wants to talk with you every day. Talk to God every day. God wants you to live at the friendship level. He wants to be your friend, and he wants you to be his friend. God wants you to talk with him all the time

O Lord, now I have heard your report, and I worship you in awe” (Habakkuk 3:2 TLB).

If you want to hear God speak, worship God.

In other words, thank him for his presence in your life and for being interested in the details of your life.

Thank him for answering your prayers: “O Lord, now I have heard your report, and I worship you in awe” (Habakkuk 3:2 TLB).

God gives you a vision. 

God gives you a dream. 

You know what God wants you to do, so now you thank him for answering your prayer. That’s part of worshiping God.

What I want you to do is to stop seeing your prayers as a monologue and start seeing them for what they truly are: a dialogue. 

Prayer is a conversation with God. 

God hears you when you pray, and he answers you when you ask questions. 

He wants to talk with you every day. 

If you faithfully talk to God every day throughout the day, it will revolutionize your life.

It’s important to understand that you can’t hear God until you know God, and there are three levels of knowing God: recognition, acquaintance, and friendship. 

You may be at the recognition level; you know God is there, but you don’t really know him. 

Or you may be at the acquaintance level; you know God a little bit, but you don’t know him very well.

God wants you to live at the friendship level. He wants to be your friend, and he wants you to be his friend. God wants you to talk with him all the time.

Talk It Over

I invite you to pray this prayer today: 

“Dear God, I’m amazed that you would want me for a friend. I really want to learn to have conversations with you. 

Help me to spend time with you every day. 

Thank you that you care about every detail of my life.

Jesus, I want to know you more and more every day, and I want to depend on you for guidance in my job, my family, my future, and in every other area of my life. 

I invite you to be the manager of my life, my Lord and Savior, as I follow you and trust you. 

In your name I pray. 

Amen.”

BY RICK WARREN

pastorrick.com

What A Friend We Have In Jesus - Fountainview Academy

lyrics

1 What a friend we have in Jesus,
all our sins and griefs to bear!
What a privilege to carry
everything to God in prayer!
O what peace we often forfeit,
O what needless pain we bear,
all because we do not carry
everything to God in prayer!

2 Have we trials and temptations?
Is there trouble anywhere?
We should never be discouraged;
take it to the Lord in prayer!
Can we find a friend so faithful
who will all our sorrows share?
Jesus knows our every weakness;
take it to the Lord in prayer!

3 Are we weak and heavy laden,
cumbered with a load of care?
Precious Savior, still our refuge--
take it to the Lord in prayer!
Do your friends despise, forsake you?
Take it to the Lord in prayer!
In his arms he'll take and shield you;
you will find a solace there.

Author: Joseph Medlicott Scriven

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Friday, December 27, 2024

Thanks for the Greatest Gift - God’s unspeakable gift to us produces unspeakable joy in us. We who deserve nothing but eternal separation from God in hell, instead will enjoy eternal life with God in heaven. To think that the mighty Creator, God the Son, would not only humble Himself to become His own creature, man, but then also suffer the unimaginable agony of the cross and separation from God the Father in order to deliver us from the just penalty of sin. That gift is so great that when we try to comprehend it, the sense of awe and gratitude becomes so overwhelming that our joy is also unspeakable - indescribable

His Unspeakable Gift

"Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift." - (2 Corinthians 9:15)

We who have known and sought to follow the Lord for many years have received many, many blessings for which to thank Him.

"Blessed be the Lord, who daily loadeth us with benefits" - (Psalm 68:19),

We can pray again and again.

But there is one blessing which is so great that it cannot even be put into words - it is unspeakable!

That gift is so great that when we try to comprehend it, the sense of awe and gratitude becomes so overwhelming (or at least should become so overwhelming) that our joy is also unspeakable - indescribable!

That gift, of course, is the gift of the Lord Jesus Christ as our Redeemer and Savior, 

"Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not, . . . ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory" - (1 Peter 1:8).

It is significant that the Greek word translated "unspeakable" occurs only these two times in the entire New Testament.

God’s unspeakable gift to us produces unspeakable joy in us.

We who deserve nothing but eternal separation from God in hell, instead will enjoy eternal life with God in heaven, and all because of that amazing and truly inexpressible gift!

To think that the mighty Creator, God the Son, would not only humble Himself to become His own creature, man, but then also suffer the unimaginable agony of the cross and separation from God the Father in order to deliver us from the just penalty of sin!

This act speaks of such love and grace that all we can do is whisper softly, "Thank you, Lord, for this unspeakable gift."

And then shout it over and over again in our hearts wherever we go and share its unspeakable joy and blessing with whomever will listen to its message.

"The Lord hath done great things for us; whereof we are glad" - (Psalm 126:3).

Thank you, Lord!

http://www.icr.org/article/7137/










https://puricarechronicles.blogspot.com/2018/12/jesus-greatest-gift-of-all-time-gods.html



































Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Your God Is Too Small - just as the Bible explains, the real God is vast beyond our own, comprehending beautiful beyond our appreciation and wonderful beyond our own imagining. Because God encompasses everything – the past, the present and the future, near and far – God is above and beyond, close and compassionate. We do have a vast love and powerful God who was at work within us, and he is able to accomplish abundantly far more than we can ask or imagine

"... You rule over all the kingdoms of the nations. In your hand are power and might, so that none is able to withstand you." - 2 Chronicles 20:6

Back in 1961 the Bible scholar and translator JB Phillips wrote a book called ‘Your God is Too Small‘. 

He discussed how today we don’t have a God that’s big enough for our modern needs. 

And Phillips pointed out another characteristic of God being too small. 

And this is what he wrote. “To many people, God has been captured, tamed and trained to their own liking.”

So they’ve lost a sense of awe and wonder at the power of God.

He is far bigger than any of us. 

“He is God – we’re not,” Phillips said. 

No one is ever really at ease in facing what we call life and death without a religious faith. 

The trouble with many people today is that they’ve not found God a big enough God to meet their modern needs.

Their experiences in life have expanded, but they have not come to know the all knowing and all-powerful true God of the Bible. 

This was written, of course, in 1960 but I think it’s still relevant today.

Understanding God for who He truly is

We think that the God we serve is not big enough to meet the challenges of modern life, leaving us disheartened and frustrated. 

So is JB Phillips, right?

Is your God too small? 

Perhaps your view of God goes back to Sunday school days as a child. 

The ‘god in a box‘ notion limiting God to an inadequate concept as the resident policeman or a grand old man, or someone who is meek and mild or the managing director – and as a result are a host of insufficient ideas of God. 

Many people live with this inner dissatisfaction without any faith. 

This is because they’ve not found with their adult minds a God who is big enough. 

Perhaps we think of God in terms of our upbringing or our hurts in life. 

We create an image of God, and we tend to tailor God to our own needs. 

For instance, a grandfatherly or grandmotherly sort of figure when we’re needing comfort or when we’ve just won that job or prize, things are going well, and we say God is that personal sponsor who is on our side.

So we do prefer a God who is small, that God, that we can manage and predict and control the kind of God that feels safe to us. 

We can understand him and explain him. 

He doesn’t embarrass us, confuse or contradict us. He doesn’t make us mad.

We just want him to make us feel nice and safe and comfortable. 

So many of us are worried. We’re worn out. 

We face each day emptier than the day before. 

And if we’re not careful, that emptiness threatens to consume us, and it moves to take over everything else.

A small god. 

Well, a small god can’t help me, but this is simply not the god that we encounter in the Bible. 

The God of the Bible is the opposite of small and manageable.

He’s big, but he’s not just big. He’s bigger than big.

He’s bigger than all the words we use to say big. 

He defies our abilities to put him in some sort of category. 

Most people want a God who is only slightly bigger, a slightly smarter version of us. 

But the God of the Bible is something altogether different. 

And here’s the irony. 

Only a God like that can explain the mysteries of life and give us a real sense of purpose and ignites our passions.

It’s like the British philosopher Evelyn Underhill, who famously said, ‘A god small enough to be understood is not big enough to be worshipped.‘

If we were really honest this morning, we want a God who is slightly smarter, a slightly smarter version of me. 

And wouldn’t that make life much easier? 

When we keep God small, we allow God to remain distant. 

Does God watch us from a distance, as the popular song says?

Or is God moving in and through creation in every moment of time? 

Does he do that today? 

Did he do it yesterday? 

I believe that he is.

Just as the Bible explains, the real God is vast beyond our own, comprehending beautiful beyond our appreciation and wonderful beyond our own imagining.

Because God encompasses everything – the past, the present and the future, near and far – God is above and beyond, close and compassionate.

Do you believe that God can do anything in your life?

Do you believe that nothing is too hard for God? 

We do have a vast love and powerful God who was at work within us, and he is able to accomplish abundantly far more than we can ask or imagine.

Let’s Pray

Dear God, I understand that often I put you in a small box, I say you’re just too small for me.

Lord, help me to get rid of that idea and to see you as the grand, eternal, phenomenal God that we love and serve and who loves us and protects us. 

I pray for this in Jesus’ name. 

Amen.

By Chris Witts

In today's world real hope is hard to find. That's why Hope 103.2 exists: to bring the message of hope to our community through a family-friendly, safe listening environment.

We won't be quick to criticise or condemn. And we won't play on people's fears. Hope 103.2 will be ready to celebrate what's good in society and culture.

hope1032.com.au

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The Creator of All Cares about You - the world is an uncertain place where change takes place on a daily, moment by moment, basis. It’s not easy to go through the experience, but with Christ you can take this opportunity to grow and get closer to Him. God, our Father, never changes and He cares for each one of us and our everyday life. He will never leave you nor forsake you. The Creator of all is in control of your life. Don’t give up. With His help you can overcome and have the victory on this situation

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Monday, July 29, 2024

The Secrets God Keeps - Speculating about what God has not revealed is like pressing on your eyelids with your fingers. The light that you think you see comes only from your own imagination. The Bible should not be used as a vehicle for endless esoteric exploration. You can study God's Word all your life and never reach the end of its wisdom, but you cannot force the Bible to answer your every question, twisting and wringing the text until it satisfies your every curiosity. God simply does not choose to reveal some things

The biblical account is unique among the creation stories of its time. 

Spare in detail, Genesis speaks with understated elegance and lofty grandeur.

It's hard not to be captivated by your first close look at a Torah scroll. 

Jewish scribes pen each one by hand, observing traditions that are thousands of years old for grinding pigments for the ink and preparing the parchment from the skin of a kosher animal.

Painstakingly hand-inked, the Hebrew letters are as mysterious as they are lovely. 

From the very first quill mark, these ancient shapes breathe the voice of God.

Beresheet bara Elohim et ha shamayim v'et ha aretz.

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth - (Genesis 1:1).

Even this very first line of Genesis inspires awe as we imagine God commanding the universe into existence.

But even more remarkable is what this line does not say.

Even a four-year-old can tell you what unanswered question lies within.

Where did God come from?

Modern readers often stumble over the Bible's lack of answers to our theological questions. 

We expect the Bible to prove God's existence if its goal is to bring us to faith. 

But the Bible's very first words simply assume God's reality without proving it.

You might be surprised that ancient readers would have found Genesis just as frustrating. 

Not so much because they didn't believe in a spiritual world, but because they were consumed by a fascination for speculating about the origins and secret lives of the gods they worshiped.

Creation myths functioned as an ancient National Enquirer, satisfying every curiosity.

What scandalous truths lurked undiscovered within the spiritual world? 

What hidden secrets lay behind our mundane reality?

Enquiring minds wanted to know.

Near Eastern mythology was filled with fantastic sagas of the gods' titillating secrets of their love affairs and bloody battles against each other.

Did you know Marduk formed the earth by murdering his mother, the monster Tiamat, and arranging the world out of her dismembered corpse? 

Did you know that when Cronos attacked his father Uranus and castrated him, Aphrodite arose out of the foaming sea when his genitals fell into the water?

Who needs to hear about the latest Elvis sighting or UFO landing when you had gory tales like this around the evening fire?

The account of creation in Genesis stands in stark contrast to the graphic, bloodstained melodramas of the surrounding peoples. 

It was a radical departure from everything the ancient world had known. 

In his classic work Understanding Genesis: The World of the Bible in the Light of History, Nahum Sarna writes:

"The Hebrew account is matchless in its solemn and majestic simplicity. It has no notion of the birth of God and no biography of God. It does not even begin with a statement about the existence of God … To the Bible, God's existence is as self-evident as life itself."

The biblical account is unique among the creation stories of its time. Spare in detail, Genesis speaks with understated elegance and lofty grandeur. 

It was a stunning contrast to the supermarket tabloid creation stories that circulated among Israel's neighbors. 

No attempt is made to explain how God came into existence. 

Out of an unapologetic majesty, the God of Israel felt no need to answer this obvious question.

Once you see Israel's God in light of the elaborate myths of the surrounding world, you get a sense that the Bible describes reality rather than fantasy. 

The Israelites were awestruck by their experience on Mount Sinai, their memories seared forever by a real-life encounter with an unearthly, incomprehensible being. 

The true God that they experienced was utterly beyond the wildest dreams of the myth-spinning pagan world and unlike anything anyone had conceived of before. 

This mysterious entity refused to be represented by any physical form, separating himself completely from every deity they ever imagined. 

The Israelites simply had no need to concoct fanciful tales about God's origins in order to convince people of his reality. 

What the Bible Does Not Say

Even in the first verse of Genesis, we see that God doesn't answer every question. 

Jewish thinkers believe that the Bible reveals this even in its very first letter. 

In a Torah scroll, the first letter of the first Hebrew word, beresheet (bare-eh-SHEET, "in the beginning"), stands out in bold, inked larger and darker than the rest of the text. 

This is the Hebrew letter bet

The letter bet corresponds to our letter B. 

It is the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet, just as "B" is the second letter of the English alphabet.

The rabbis asked the question:

Why do the Scriptures begin with the second letter of the alphabet rather than the first?

Their answer:

"To show that the Scriptures do not answer every question, and not all knowledge is accessible to man, but some is reserved for God himself."

Even the shape of the letter bet shows this. It is closed on the right side, but it is open on the left. 

Since Hebrew is read right to left, it appeared to the rabbis that the Scriptures start with a letter that is open in the direction of the reading but closed toward the direction of the beginning of the text. 

The bet is a one-way sign saying that you need to start here, at the first letter, and move forward, asking what God's will is and how should you live it out. 

Because the letter bet is closed on the top, back, and bottom, it is futile to speculate about what is behind (what existed before creation), or above (in heaven) or below (in hell). 

One rabbi I met put it this way:

"Speculating about what God has not revealed is like pressing on your eyelids with your fingers. The light that you think you see comes only from your own imagination."

The point of the rabbinic saying about bet is not to discourage study and inquiry but to teach that the Bible should not be used as a vehicle for endless esoteric exploration. 

You can study God's Word all your life and never reach the end of its wisdom, but you cannot force the Bible to answer your every question, twisting and wringing the text until it satisfies your every curiosity. 

God simply does not choose to reveal some things.

by Lois Tverberg 

Excerpt from Walking in the Dust of Rabbi Jesus

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The Beginning of Creation - God’s work of creation had a beginning, and that beginning was Christ - the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God. The glorified Christ here assumes this as one of His divine names. . “In the beginning was the Word ... All things were made by him.” Adam and Eve were created at the beginning of creation, not after the earth had already existed for 4.5 billion years. “From the beginning of the creation God made them male and female”

ALPHA AND OMEGA -“Alpha” and “omega” are the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet. Jesus being the “Alpha and Omega” means that He was at the beginning of all things and will be at the close. He has no beginning, nor will He have any end with respect to time, being from everlasting to everlasting. It is equivalent to saying He always existed and always will exist. It was Christ, as second Person of the Trinity, who brought about the creation

Jesus the Great I AM - Jesus was equating Himself with the "I AM" title God gave Himself in Exodus 3:14. Such a statement, if not true, was blasphemy and the punishment prescribed by the Mosaic Law was death. Jesus committed no blasphemy; He was and is God, the second Person of the Godhead, equal to the Father in every way. Jesus used the same phrase “I AM” in seven declarations about Himself. He combines I AM with tremendous metaphors which express His saving relationship toward the world