Monday, August 24, 2009

August 23

Are we standing on the promises or sitting on the premises

The late Studs Terkel recorded a conversation of teen-agers about the Great Depression. Lily: “My grandmother’d tell us things about the Depression.” Roy: “They’re always tellin’ us that we should be glad we got food and all that, ‘cause back in the Thirties they used to tell us people were starving and got no jobs and all that stuff.” Lily: “The food lines they told us about.” “Roy: “Yeah, you had to stay in line and wait for food. Lily: “And everything. You got when it was there. If it wasn’t, then you made without it. She said there was a lot of waiting.” (“Hard Times,” p. 22)
Heavenly Father, help all parents to teach their children that life is more than possessions. On second thought, teach that to us all!

Samuel Chadwick said, “The one concern of the devil is to keep saints from prayer. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless work, and prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray."

Christianity is not engrossed by this transitory world, but measures all things by the thought of eternity. J. Gresham Machen


Americans worry about a big national debt and a government bureaucracy that never seems to stop growing.
In 1801 President Thomas Jefferson worried about the same things. After all, the number of government employees had grown to 130 and the debt had ballooned to all of $17 million, an amount equal to the hourly interest on the debt in recent times.
Today in Washington more people spend more money than that on a typical federal agency Christmas party.

Eve’s Mistake - When Eve listened to the serpent, it wasn’t necessarily sin. But by entertaining a viewpoint other than God’s, it put her on a slippery slope that quickly led to disobedience.
Do you find yourself listening to the world’s way of thinking? It’s pervasive. It comes to us through TV, magazines, movies, friends, malls, and catalogs. A steady diet of worldly influences will shape our view of what’s valuable, what’s beautiful, and what’s important.
We can’t expose ourselves to the world’s false, deceptive ways and expect to come out unscathed. Eve’s first mistake wasn’t eating the fruit. It was listening to the serpent.
As you and I listen to input today, let’s remember the words of Psalm 1: "Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, or stand in the way of sinners, or sit in the seat of the mockers. But his delight is in the law of the LORD, and on His law he meditates day and night." ~Nancy Leigh DeMoss

A visiting speaker was impressed by the enthusiasm our Christian school students showed in their physical education class.
"I exercise, too," he sighed, faintly smiling at our pastor. "Every morning I awaken to the alarm, jump from bed, and run around the block six times."
As our pastor expressed surprise and offered hearty praise, the man continued, "Then I kick the block under the bed and go back to sleep."

Two mothers met for coffee. "Well Ruthie, how are the kids?"
"To tell you the truth, my son has married a real tramp!" says Ruth. "She doesn't get out of bed until 11. She's out all day spending his money on Heaven knows what, and when he gets home, exhausted, does she have a nice hot dinner for him? Ha! She makes him take her out to dinner at an expensive restaurant."
"Oh! What a shame. And how about your daughter?"
"Ah! Now there's a lucky girl. She has married a saint. He brings her breakfast in bed, he gives her enough money to buy whatever she needs, and in the evening he always takes her out to dinner at a nice restaurant."

Grandpa was always going on about the good old days and the lower cost of living, in particular.
"When I was a kid, my mom could send me to the store and I'd get a salami, two pints of milk, six oranges, two loaves of bread, a magazine and some new blue jeans all for a dollar!"
Then Grandpa said sadly, "You can't do that anymore. They got those video cameras everywhere you look."

A New York boy was being led through the swamps of Louisiana by his cousin.
"Is it true that an alligator won't attack you if you carry a flashlight?"
The cousin smirked and replied, "Depends on how fast ya carry the flashlight.

"One person with a belief is equal to a force of ninety-nine with only interests."

"If you believe you can, you probably can. If you believe you won't, you most assuredly won't. Belief is the ignition switch that gets you off the launching pad."


Difficult Sayings
That great American writer, Mark Twain, wrote: "Most people are bothered by those passages in Scriptures which they cannot understand; but as for me, I always notice that the passages in Scripture which trouble me most are those which I do understand."
I suspect that, at times, we all would like to walk away from the church and never come back. We want a God different from the one we find in Jesus.
Flesh and blood? Yes. But demanding? No.
Resurrected? Yes. But crucified? No.
Salvation? Yes. Repentance? No.
Love? Yes. Commitment? No.
Unfortunately you cannot have one without the other. The rose comes with the thorns. The pains come with the birth. Night come with day. The best of times can only be lived because there are those times that are so bad.

A missionary in Brazil visited a market town on a religious holiday, and saw a sale sign in a store's window advertising "Cheap crosses for sell." We may look for cheap crosses - no sacrifice, no commitment, no cost, no pain - but there is no such thing. Jesus' disciples have to follow the way of the cross.

God has a way of loving us and blessing us that is so much better than fair. Think of the ways God has blessed us that transcend what we "deserve." Every good thing that has ever come to us is a gift of God's grace. If you and I could ever stop being self-centered long enough to be honest, we would have to say that we are not entitled to any good thing. We have no right to demand anything. And the last thing we really want is for God to just be "fair" with us. What we want and what we need is grace, the love that is better than fair. And grace is exactly what we ultimately receive from the God who is better than fair, even when life is less than fair. --Charles E. Poole, in Is Life Fair? Good Words for Hard Times, 1996, Smyth & Helwys, Macon, Georgia

Southern Californians are always saying that they can ski on snow in the mountains in the morning and ski on water on the ocean in the afternoon. But have you ever heard of, or met, anyone who has actually done that? Sometimes we Christians do the same thing. We talk about Christ controlling our lives but in fact we do as we please.

"You have to decide what your highest priorities are and have the courage -- pleasantly, smilingly, non-apologetically -- to say 'no' to other things. And the way you do that is by having a bigger 'yes' burning inside. The enemy of the 'best' is often the 'good.'" -- "I will love the light for it shows me the way, yet I will endure the darkness for it shows me the stars." -- Og Mandino

"You're never as good as everyone tells you when you win, and you're never as bad as they say when you lose." -- Lou Holtz

"You can't succeed at anything unless you're willing to risk failure." -- Anonymous

"If you want to hit home runs, you need to be willing to strike out. Remember, the year Babe Ruth broke all records for hitting the most home runs, he also broke all
records for the most strikeouts." -- Anonymous

"A high jumper never knows how high he can jump until he reaches his failure point." -- Robert Schuller

WINNERS VERSUS LOSERS
1. A winner says, "Let's find out." A loser says, "Nobody knows."
2. When a winner makes a mistake, he says, "I was wrong." When a loser makes a mistake, he says, "It wasn't my fault."
3. A winner goes through a problem. A loser goes around it, and never gets past it.
4. A winner makes commitments. A loser makes promises.
5. A winner says, "I'm good, but not as good as I ought to be." A loser says, "I'm not as bad as a lot of other people are."
6. A winner tries to learn from those who are superior to him. A loser tries to tear down those who are superior to him."
7. A winner says, "There ought to be a better way to do it." A loser says, "That's the way it's always been done here."

August 16

Chocolate may contain a chemical that makes one feel loved but when it comes to comfort foods, people also like soup or mom's pot roast. That's according to a survey of 1,005 consumers, conducted by University of Illinois researchers, which found women prefer chocolate and cookies while men gravitate toward soup, pizza and pasta.

"If you believe you can, you probably can. If you believe you won't, you most assuredly won't. Belief is the ignition switch that gets you off the launching pad."

"Somehow I can't believe that there are any heights that can't be scaled by a man who knows the secrets of making dreams come true. This special secret - curiosity, confidence, courage, and constancy, and the greatest of all is confidence. When you believe in a thing, believe in it all the way, implicitly and unquestionable." -- Walt Disney

"One person with a belief is equal to a force of ninety-nine with only interests."

Discovering too late that a watermelon spiked with vodka had accidentally been served to a luncheon meeting of local ministers, the restaurant's owner waited nervously for the clerics' reaction.
"Quick, man," he whispered to the waiter, "what did they say?"
"Nothing," replied the waiter. "They were all too busy slipping the seeds into their pockets."

"You have to decide what your highest priorities are and have the courage -- pleasantly, smilingly, non-apologetically -- to say 'no' to other things. And the way you do that is by having a bigger 'yes' burning inside. The enemy of the 'best' is often the 'good.'" --
"I will love the light for it shows me the way, yet I will endure the darkness for it shows me the stars." -- Og Mandino

"You're never as good as everyone tells you when you win, and you're never as bad as they say when you lose." -- Lou Holtz

"You can't succeed at anything unless you're willing to risk failure." -- Anonymous

"If you want to hit home runs, you need to be willing to strike out. Remember, the year Babe Ruth broke all records for hitting the most home runs, he also broke all records for the most strikeouts." -- Anonymous

"A high jumper never knows how high he can jump until he reaches his failure point." -- Robert Schuller

Putting my life in the hands of the Destiny Maker has been an absolute blast. I've learned that he's smarter than me, wiser than me, and stronger than me. He has a great view from above and he loves me in the most radical way.

Despite the substantial attention focused on Protestant mega-churches, such congregations draw about 9% of adults who frequent a Protestant church. In contrast, 41% of adults attending a Protestant church associate with a congregation of 100 or fewer adults. An additional 23% can be found at churches of 101 to 200 adults, 18% associate with bodies of 201 to 499 adults, and 9% can be found in churches of 500 to 999 adults.

Tomorrow's Fruit In every forest, on every farm, in every orchard on earth, it's what's under the ground that creates what's above the ground. That's why placing your attention on the fruits that you have already grown is futile. You cannot change the fruits that are already hanging on the tree. You can, however, change tomorrow's fruits. But to do so, you will have to dig below the ground and strengthen the roots.

"The Happy Hour for the Christian should be the hour of worship on Sunday morning, but how do you honestly feel when you are awakened by the alarm on the Lord's Day and you realize it is another "Church Day"? Can you hardly wait for the service time to roll around or do you roll over in bed, moan and groan and cover your head, and wish that once, once again maybe once more like last Sunday the one before, you would, or could sleep in and forget the whole boring, time consuming thing?? Is the thought of worship agony or ecstasy? I think we are coming to meet God--not just any body, but God!! Shouldn't the delightful suspense of worship make our breath short and our hearts beat faster?"

There is an story about minister walking along the ocean with his small son. The boy questioned his father about Sunday's sermon. The boy said, "Dad, I cannot understand how Christ can live in us and we live in him at the same time." Further down the beach, the father noticed an empty bottle with a cork in it. Taking the bottle, he half filled it with water, re-corked it and flung it out into the ocean.
As they watched the bottle bob up and down he said, "Son, the sea is in the bottle and the bottle is in the sea. It is a picture of life in Christ. You live under the Lordship of Christ and He lives in you."

Automaker Henry Ford asked electrical genius Charlie Steinmetz to build the generators for his factory. One day the generators ground to a halt, and the repairmen couldn't find the problem. So Ford called Steinmetz, who tinkered with the machines for a few hours and then threw the switch. The generators whirred to life--but Ford got a bill for $10,000 from Steinmetz. Flabbergasted, the rather tightfisted carmaker inquired why the bill was so high. Steinmetz's reply: For tinkering with the generators, $10. For knowing where to tinker, $9,990. Ford paid the bill.


Twelve Reasons Why I Stopped Attending Sports Events
Every time I went, they asked me for money.
The people with whom I had to sit by didn't seem very friendly.
The seats were too hard and not comfortable at all.
The coach never came to call on me.
The referee made a decision with which I could not agree.
I was sitting with some hypocrites--they came only to see what others were wearing.
Some games went into overtime, and I was late getting home.
The band played some numbers that I had never heard before.
The games are scheduled when I want to do other things.
My parents took me to too many games when I was growing up.
Since I read a book on sports, I feel that I know more than the coaches anyhow.
I don't want to take my children, because I want them to choose for themselves what sport they like best.

"If you concentrate on finding whatever is good in every situation, you will discover that your life will suddenly be filled with gratitude, a feeling that nurtures the soul." -- Rabbi Harold Kushner

"Those people who are down-to-earth are usually well grounded." -- Gary Kallio

"When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves." -- Victor Frankl

"Who gossips to you will gossip of you." -- Puerto Rican Proverb

“Life is ten percent what happens to you and ninety percent how you respond to it.” -- Lou Holtz

August 9

"My dental hygienist is cute. Every time I visit, I eat a whole package of Oreo cookies while I'm in the waiting room. Sometimes she has to cancel the rest of the afternoon's appointments." - Steven Wright

Nobel novelist, Mahfouz Naguib says: “You can tell if a man is clever by his answers. You can tell if a man is wise by his questions.”

Nap Time
According to a Pew Research Center Social & Demographic Trends survey, on a typical day, a third of the adults (34%) in the United States take a nap. When respondents were asked if they had taken a nap in the past 24 hours, more men than women report that they had (34% vs. 31%). This gender gap occurs mostly among older adults. More than four-in-ten (41%) men ages 50 and older say they had napped compared with just 28 percent of women of the same age. Below the age of 50, men and women are about equal (35% vs. 34%). Click here to view the report. [PewResearch.org]

"Self discipline is the ability to make yourself do what you should do when you should do it, whether you feel like it or not." -- Brian Tracy

"You can give without loving, but you can never love without giving." -- Anonymous

"You cannot prevent the birds of sorrow from flying over your head, but you can prevent them from building nests in your hair." -- Chinese Proverb

"An attitude of gratitude creates blessings." -- Sir John Templeton

"Your living is determined not so much by what life brings you as by the attitude you bring to life; not so much by what happens to you as by the way your mind looks at what happens." -- Lewis L. Dunnington

"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." --Mark Twain

JOY 9

"Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated failures. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent." -- Calvin Coolidge

Annual Ranking of Occupations
Every year since 1977, The Harris Poll® has been asking Americans their opinions about various occupations. In July of this year, 1,010 adults (aged 18 and over) were read a list of 23 occupations, and asked to say if they felt each occupation had very great prestige, considerable prestige, some prestige or hardly any prestige at all. The top six occupations which were seen as having "very great prestige" were:
* Firefighter (62%)
* Scientist (57%)
* Doctor (56%)
* Nurse (54%)
* Teacher (51%)
* Military Officer (51%)
The occupations that were on the top of the list for having "hardly any prestige at all" were union leader, actor, stock broker and real estate agent. The occupation of priest/minister/clergy came eighth on the list of the occupations with very high prestige, with 41 percent saying that clergy have "very high prestige." Another 21 percent said that clergy have "considerable prestige" and 28 percent said that the occupation of clergy has "some prestige." In 1977, only the occupations of scientist and doctor were seen as having higher prestige than the occupation of priest/minister/clergy. For the complete report, visit www.harrisinteractive.com.

• The Best Husbands Are American Men
A British study found that Australian men make the worst husbands and hate helping out around the house. U.S. and British men don't mind lending a hand when it comes to housework. More than 13,000 men and women from 12 developed countries were studied. American men were considered the best husbands, along with men from other "egalitarian" countries, such as Norway, Sweden, England and Northern Ireland. Click here to read more from the Australian Associated Press report.

School days are the happiest days of your life--provided, of course, your kids are old enough to go.

"Instead of giving money to found colleges to promote learning, why don't they pass a constitutional amendment prohibiting anybody from learning anything? If it works as good as the Prohibition once did, why, in five years we would have the smartest race of people on Earth."--Will Rogers



Jesus Comes to Us in the Poor
What finally counts is not whether we know Jesus and his words but whether we live our lives in the Spirit of Jesus. The Spirit of Jesus is the Spirit of Love. Jesus himself makes this clear when he speaks about the last judgment. There people will ask: "Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink?" and Jesus will answer: "In so far as you did this to one of the least ... of mine, you did it to me" (Matthew 25:37, 40).
This is our great challenge and consolation. Jesus comes to us in the poor, the sick, the dying, the prisoners, the lonely, the disabled, the rejected. There we meet him, and there the door to God's house is opened for us.

Human Knowledge
Listen to this statistic: Knowledge is exploding at such a rate--more than 2000 pages a minute--that even Einstein couldn't keep up. In fact, if you read 24 hours a day, from age 21 to 70, and retained all you read, you would be one and a half million years behind when you finished (Campus Life)
An amazing statistic. Now tell me when do you suppose this information was compiled? It will alarm you that these statistics do not take into account the Internet. They do not even take into account the personal computer. And, why not? It is because the statistics are from 1979.
It is crucial that we learn not the glut of information that is screaming down towards us on the information super highway, but that we learn something that will sustain us for the days to come. The Prophets from of old proclaimed: They will all be taught by God. Are we listening?
Scholars have concluded that a peasant in tenth century Europe was exposed to roughly the same volume of information in his lifetime as is published in one daily edition of the New York Times.


Recall the paragraph in the story of The Ugly Duckling when the ugly duck realizes who he really is. "He saw below him his own image, but he was no longer a clumsy dark gray bird, ugly and ungainly, he was himself a swan! It does not matter in the least having been born in a duck yard, if only you come out of a swan's egg!" Jesus was explaining to the gathered people that it was the same with them. It does not matter in the least having been from Nazareth and born in Bethlehem, if only you are born of God.

Orson Welles once said, "My doctor has advised me to give up those intimate little dinners for 4, unless, of course, there are 3 other people eating with me."

In one of his sermons, John Baillie affirmed the absolute priority of this fellowship with Jesus, this attention to His saving Word and to the receiving of His life. He told the story of a man on the northwest frontier of India leading a fine horse with elaborate harness. There came the day when a band of robbers seized the horse, but let the man go. There came another day when a group of thieves robed him of a gold chain concealed in his turban. Eventually, the man reached his destination wearing only a ragged loincloth. But to his master’s son he presented the real gift he had been assigned to convey: a great pearl that he had hidden in his armpit. “So let us, if need be,” said John Baillie, “surrender all other things, but hold to the one thing needful.” Perhaps better: to the One Person needful!

Why, Why, Why...
Why do we press harder on a remote control when we know the batteries are almost dead?
Why do banks charge a fee on 'insufficient funds' when they already know there is not enough money?
Why does someone believe you when you say there are four billion stars; but have to check when you say the paint is still wet?
Whose idea was it to put an 'S' in the word 'lisp'?
If people evolved from apes, why are there still apes?
Why is it that no matter what color bubble bath you use, the bubbles are always white?
Is there ever a day that mattresses are not on sale?
Why do people constantly return to the refrigerator with hopes that something new to eat will have materialized?
Why do people keep running over a string a dozen times with their vacuum cleaner, then reach down, pick it up, examine it, then put it down to give the vacuum one more chance?
Why is it that no plastic bag will open from the end on your first try?
Why is it that whenever you attempt to catch something that's falling off the table, you always manage to knock something else over?
In winter why do we try to keep the house as warm as it was in summer when we complained about the heat?

Two Norwegians from Wisconsin are sittin' in a boat on Dead Lake, fishing and suckin' down beer, when all of a sudden Sven says, "I think I'm going to divorce my wife. She hasn't spoken to me in over six months." Ole sips his beer and says, "You better think it over. Women like that are hard to find."


Nostalgic Fishermen
Someone suggested that we imagine this fishing club where the members merely sat around swapping fish stories about the big one they landed, the whopper that broke away, but they never stepped into a boat or cast their line in the water. What kind of a fishing club would it be whose members were content to admire the trophies on the wall, but never go out and actually go fishing?
A lot of churches are like that. They sit around bragging about the days when their boat was full of fresh fish. They look nostalgically to the days when the main purpose of their church was to go fishing, to reach others for Christ. But they never actually go fishing; they merely talk about going fishing. That's not what we're about as a church.

Appreciating Appreciation By Michael Josephson of Character Counts (603.1)
The song "Thank God for Dirty Dishes" makes the point that if you're lucky to have enough food to make dirty dishes, you should be grateful. Instead of grousing about property taxes, be thankful you own property. When you wait in line at the bank or are stuck in traffic, be grateful you have money and a car to drive. Easier said than done!
For me, appreciation doesn't come naturally. I'm not sure how, but somewhere along the way I came to associate gratitude with settling for whatever you get and not pushing harder to get more. Gratitude seemed like a form of surrender and a poor life strategy. If you're satisfied with the way things are, you'll never feel the urge to make them better.
What a pity I had to reach my 50s before I began to appreciate appreciation and realize it's rewarding to feel good about something--and there's always something to feel good about.
Although I don't do it enough, I've come to understand the profound wisdom in clichés like "stop and smell the roses" and "count your blessings." They remind us how easy it is to overlook things we could enjoy now while we look for what we think will make us happy later.
I'm still a novice at this, but I can tell you the more I appreciate, the happier I am. And the more appreciative my children learn to be, the happier they'll be.
This is Michael Josephson reminding you that character counts.

August 2

A small boy told a Sunday school teacher: "When you die, God takes care of you like your parents did when you were alive — only God doesn't yell at you all the time."

Now That’s Hot The highest temperature recorded anywhere on Earth was in Aziziyah, Libya, in September of 1922 – 136 degrees Fahrenheit.
The highest temperature recorded in the United States was in Death Valley, Calif., in July of 1913 – 134 degrees Fahrenheit.

"Praise isn’t a response to our circumstances, which are constantly changing. Praise is a response to the goodness of God who never changes." --Nancy Leigh DeMoss:

A nervous young minister, new to the church, told the flock, "For my text today, I will take the words, 'And they fed five men with five thousand loaves of bread and two thousand fishes.'"
A member of the flock snicked at the preacher's snafu, raised his hand and said, "That's not much of a trick. I could do that."
The minister didn't respond. However, the next Sunday he decided to repeat the text. This time he did it properly, "And they fed five thousand men with five loaves of bread and two fishes." Smiling, the minister said to the noisy man, "Could
you do that, Mr. Perkins?"
The member of the flock said, "I sure could."
"How would you do it?"
"With all the food I had left over from last Sunday!"


A Messy Kitchen real signs found in the real kitchens of real people.
"A messy kitchen is a happy kitchen and this kitchen is delirious."
"A clean house is a sign of a misspent life."
"If we are what we eat, then I'm easy, fast, and cheap."
"Thou shalt not weigh more than thy refrigerator."
"My next house will have no kitchen, just vending machines."
"A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand."

God-shaped Vacuum
"There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of every person, and it can never be filled by any created thing. It can only be filled by God, made known through Jesus Christ." Blaise Pascal

"An idealist believes the short run doesn't count. A cynic believes the long run doesn't matter. A realist believes that what is done or left undone in the short run determines the long run." -- Sydney J. Harris

"Your behavior is what you believe; all the rest is just talk." --

"Maturity is the ability to do a job whether or not you are supervised, to carry money without spending it, and to bear an injustice without wanting to get even." -- Ann Landers

"It is when we face ourselves and face Christ, that we are lost in wonder, love and praise. We need to rediscover the almost lost discipline of self-examination; and then a re-awakened sense of sin will beget a re-awakened sense of wonder." -- Andrew Murray


"Bigness comes from doing many small things well. Individually, they are not very dramatic transactions. Together, though, they add up." -- Edward S. Finkelstein

"Adversity causes some men to break; others to break records." -- William A. Ward


The CEO was scheduled to speak at an important convention, so he asked one of his employees to write him a punchy, 20-minute speech.
When the CEO returned from the big event, he was furious.
"What's the idea of writing me an hour-long speech?" he demanded to know. "Half the audience walked out before I finished."
The employee was baffled. "I wrote you a 20-minute speech," he replied. "And I gave you the two extra copies you asked for."

As a young electronics graduate many years ago, I remember unpacking a new oscilloscope, the latest and best of its class. Several hours later, having only achieved mixed results, I decided to open the manual. The first page stated in large bold letters: "Now you've tried it your way, try it our way."1
Good advice for all who want to live and die God's way!

COW GROANERS
- From a forgetful cow you'd get Milk of Amnesia.
- When the bull lays down in the field, we call that bull-dozin'.
- You know why the cow jumped over the moon? - The farmer had cold hands.
- Do Russians get their milk from Moscows?
- What's the favorite key for cows to sing in? Beef-flat.
- I knew a farmer with a sick cow. The vet said it was the worst case of hay fever he'd ever seen.
- Yesterday I saw a cow walking backward. It went, "Oom."
- I heard about this cow who could actually drive a car. Had to quit after getting a ticket, though. - It was a moo-ving violation.
- I read about a scientist who crossed a cow with a duck because he was in a mood for milk and quackers.


Satisfying Ones Needs - Materialism
Bread has power but in the end its power will fail. Bread can buy you land but not love; it can buy you bonds but not brotherhood; gold but not gladness; silver but not sincerity; hospitals but not health; 3 karats but not character; houses but not homes. You can trade bread for commodities but not comfort, real-estate but not righteousness, hotels but not heaven.
To satisfy your hunger for heaven you cannot eat the bread of earth, you must eat the bread of God. That bread is He who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.

Bread Is Wondrous
Ladislas M. Orsy wrote: "There is something wondrous in the taste of bread. It is so ordinary yet it is so good. It is very democratic. It nourishes the poor and the rich. It goes well with meat or fish, with fruit or cheese. It may return three times a day to the table; it may even stay there all day long. Yet it never outstays its welcome." Jesus Christ said, "I myself am the bread of life. No one who comes to me shall ever be hungry; no one who believes in me shall ever thirst."
These sayings point to some of our society's attitudes about food: 'only junk food is enjoyable', 'food is meant to satisfy us', 'if I had to cook it, it doesn't taste good', and 'as long as it's not good for me, I should eat as much as I want'. We stuff ourselves, trying to fill the hole inside of us with food, as if we could eat something that would satisfy us. But we could stuff ourselves at every meal and still be hungry for something deeper!

"There is nothing that is more dangerous to your own salvation, more unworthy of God and more harmful to your own happiness, than that you should be content to remain as you are." - Francois Fenelon, French Archbishop, 444 Surprising Quotes about Jesus

"My gym has two-pound weights. If you're using two-pound weights, how did you even open the door to the gym? What's your dream? To pump up and open your mail?" - Dave Attell

"The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson

July 26

I always do my exercises regularly in the morning. Immediately after waking I sternly say to myself, "Ready, now. Up. Down. Up. Down." And after two strenuous minutes I tell myself, "Okay, now try the other eyelid.


I called a company and asked to speak to Bob. The person who answered said, "Bob is on vacation. Would you like to hold?"

I think NASCAR would be much more exciting if, like in a skating rink, every 15 minutes someone announced it was time to reverse direction.

** Have you ever wondered why clocks run clockwise? Before there were clocks, there were sundials. In the northern hemisphere, the shadows on the sundial rotate in the direction we now call clockwise, and the hands of the clock mimic the natural movements of the sun. So too our lives should imitate the Son of God.

The only thing harder than waiting on God is wishing we had. --Unknown

Lance Armstrong. Going for his eighth Tour de France. His heart is nearly one-third larger than that of the average man. At resting, it beats an average of 32 times per minute, during peak performance, 200. He burns up about 6,500 calories every day for three weeks while in the race. One of the stages of the race is 120 miles long-that day he will burn 10,000 calories. You and I burn 3,500 and that's on a good day. His lungs can take in twice the oxygen. His body fat level is 4 percent. Yours is 16. He has a weird femur bone. It's longer than the average man's. That gives him more torque when peddling his bicycle for 2000 miles through French mountains. This year he is older than most of the other competitors, yet it is as if he was built to ride.

Remember the old legend about the lighthouse keeper who knew that there were poor people living nearby, in hovels, who were cold at night because they couldn't afford oil for their heaters He pitied them greatly, so he doled out to them the oil that was meant to keep the light lit. The people were a little warmer for a while, but the great light eventually went out, and, as the result, there was a shipwreck, and hundreds died. It is a good parable to illustrate how we can be so concerned to meet people's immediate needs that we neglect their larger needs. We need oil to keep us warm, but we also need a light to show us the way. We need bread, but we also need the Word of God.

During the winter of 1610, the population of Jamestown went from about 500 people to about 60. While disease and conflict with the natives took some, most of the settlers simply starved. There were plentiful supplies of fish, oysters, frogs, fowl, and deer; but these settlers from the city were not accustomed to obtaining food from the land. Hence, they starved!
We sometimes act the same way. God comes to us continually in the person of the Holy Spirit to guide us. As a loving Father God awaits the opportunity to meet our needs, but we are not accustomed to receiving from His loving hand. Nor does it occur to us to pray. So we wander blindly from problem to problem, a sort of picture of those early settlers who starved in a land of plenty.
Immediately after fighting had stopped in World War II, American soldiers gathered up many hungry and homeless children and placed them in tent cities. Many of them were malnourished and in need of medical care. The soldiers shared their bread with them. However, the soldiers noticed the children were afraid to go to sleep at night. One of the soldiers tried an experiment after dinner--he gave the children a piece of bread to hold. The result was astounding. When they had the security of bread for tomorrow they slept like babies. It took away fear.

Bread! There is a surplus of meaning in this word. The word evokes strong emotions like security, fellowship, the presence of God, provisions for the journey. Bread is deemed holy by peoples everywhere, and the root word for bread in most languages can be translated "food," as it is in the Bible.

Tom Dorsey was absolutely convinced that the words and the melody came to him as a direct gift from God. He went on to write more than 400 gospel songs, including We Will Meet in the Sweet By and By, There'll Be Peace, and Stand By Me. "I learned," said Tom Dorsey, "that when we are in our deepest grief, when we feel farthest from God. this is when we are most open to that restoring power."

July 19

The "haves" and the "have nots" can be traced back to the "dids" and the "did nots."

The most popular six items for barbecuing account for two-thirds of all foods prepared on the grill. Steak, chicken and burgers are the top three choices, accounting for 47 percent. One of the fastest-growing foods grilled is potatoes, which doubled in popularity since 1996.
TOP SIX FOODS PREPARED ON THE GRILL
Steak 19 percent
Chicken 15 percent
Burgers 13 percent
Hot Dogs 8 percent
Pork Chops 6 percent
Potatoes 6 percent

As with many funerals, it was a cloudy, rainy day. The deceased was a little old lady who had devoted her entire married life to fussing over and correcting her poor husband. Everything he did - she complained about. When the graveside service had no more than terminated, there was a tremendous burst of thunder accompanied by a distant lightning bolt. The little old man looked at the pastor and calmly said, "Well, she's arrived."

"God promises a safe landing, not a calm passage."

"In prayer, God hears more than words. He listens to your heart."

** Christian literature, to be accepted and approved by evangelical leaders of our times, must follow very closely the same train of thought, a kind of "party line" from which it is scarcely safe to depart. A half-century of this in America has made us smug and content. We imitate each other with slavish devotion. Our most strenuous efforts are put forth to try to say the same thing that everyone around us is saying--and yet to find an excuse for saying it, some little safe variation on the approved theme or, if no more, at least a new illustration. -- A. W. Tozer in The Pursuit of God

F ... False
E ... Evidence
A ... Appearing
R ... Real

HOW TO SAY, "I LOVE YOU"
English ................................ I love you
Spanish ............................... Te Amo
French................................. Je T'aime
German................................ Ich Liebe Dich
Japanese.............................. Ai Shite Imasu
Italian................................... Ti Amo
Chinese................................ Wo Ai Ni
Swedish............................... Jag Alskar Dig


"A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart and can sing it back to you when you have forgotten the words." - Unknown

"The happiest of people don't necessarily have the best of everything; they just make the best of everything that comes along their way." - Author Unknown

"Reading makes a broad man, but writing makes an exact man." - Francis Bacon

"It's not by doing the things we like, but by liking the things we do that we can discover life's blessings." - Goethe

"Your life is not a coincidence. It's a reflection of you!" - Author Unknown

Compassion and Motive
Jesus renewed people with the power of his compassion. I like the ancient legend about the monk who found a precious stone, a precious jewel. A short time later, the monk met a traveler, who said he was hungry and asked the monk if he would share some of his provisions. When the monk opened his bag, the traveler saw the precious stone and, on an impulse, asked the monk if he could have it. Amazingly, the monk gave the traveler the stone.
The traveler departed quickly, overjoyed with his new possession. However, a few days later, he came back, searching for the monk. He returned the stone to the monk and made a request: "Please give me something more valuable, more precious than this stone. Please give me that which enabled you to give me this precious stone!"
In this day when we are suppose to have so many devices to save time, I've never seen so many hurried and restless people! If the computer, the laptop, the cellular phone, and all of these other technological wonders are suppose to save us time, why do we have so little time for the things that matter?
It seems that with all we've accomplished, about all we have really added is speed and noise. We get there faster, but we don't know where we are going. And when we get there, we're out of breath.
I read one time about a man who swallowed an egg whole. He was afraid to move because he was afraid it would break. But he was afraid to sit still because he was afraid it would hatch. There are a lot of people like that today--so frenetic, so pressured they don't know which way to go. And the place where the pressure and restless often hit home is in the home.

One man challenged another to an all-day wood chopping contest. The challenger worked very hard, stopping only for a brief lunch break. The other man had a leisurely lunch and took several breaks during the day. At the end of the day, the challenger was surprised and annoyed to find that the other fellow had chopped substantially more wood than he had. "I don't get it," he said. "Every time I checked, you were taking a rest, yet you chopped more wood than I did."
"But you didn't notice," said the winning woodsman, "that I was sharpening my ax when I sat down to rest." Traditional


It is an old and ironic habit of human beings to run faster when we have lost our way.
A story is told about some African workers who were hired to carry heavy equipment on their backs to a remote outpost. It was a place that couldn't be reached any other way but on foot. After several days of difficult travel, the workers refused to pick up their packs and go any further. They sat by the side of the trail ignoring the shouts of the leader of the expedition. Finally the leader asked why they wouldn't go on. One of the workers replied, "Sir, we are waiting for our souls to catch up with our bodies."

According to a Greek legend, in ancient Athens a man noticed the great storyteller Aesop playing childish games with some little boys. He laughed and jeered at Aesop, asking him why he wasted his time in such frivolous activity.
Aesop responded by picking up a bow, loosening its string, and placing it on the ground. Then he said to the critical Athenian, "Now, answer the riddle, if you can. Tell us what the unstrung bows implies."
The man looked at it for several moments but had no idea what point Aesop was trying to make. Aesop explained, "If you keep a bow always bent, it will break eventually; but if you let it go slack, it will be more fit for use when you want it."
People are also like that. That's why we all need to take time to rest. Start by setting aside a special time to relax physically and renew yourself emotionally and spiritually. You will be at your best for the Lord if you have taken time to loosen the bow.

"All Word and no Spirit you dry up, all Spirit and no Word you blow up, the right amount of Word and the right amount of Spirit you grow up". Allistair Begg

If You Don’t …..
1. If you don’t have a Bible, get one.
If you’ve got a Bible, read it.
If you read the Bible, believe it.
If you believe the Bible, live it.
If you live it, share it.