We Lift Our Hearts to Thee

We Lift Our Hearts to Thee
Many of us are celebrating the Lord’s Table today in our churches. I recently came across the words to a wonderful hymn written by John Wesley. Think about these words today as you prepare your heart to celebrate the Lord’s Table:
We lift our hearts to Thee,
O Day Star from on high!
The sun itself is but Thy shade,
Yet cheers both earth and sky.

O let Thine orient beams
The night of sin disperse
The mists of error and of vice
Which shade the universe.

How beauteous nature now:
How dark and sad before!
With joy we view the pleasing change
And nature’s God adore.

O may no gloomy crime
Pollute the rising day;
Or Jesus’ blood, like evening dew,
Wash all the stains away.

May we this life improve,
To mourn for error’s past;
And live this short, revolving day
As if it were our last.

To God – the Father, Son
And Spirit – One in Three,
Be glory; as it was, is now,
And shall forever be.

Have a blessed Lord’s Day! – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick
GPS – God’s Positioning System: 2 Chronicles 13-16; Psalm 124; Proverbs 5
Compass Pointers: Look for yourself and you will find in the long run only hatred, loneliness, despair, rage, ruin and decay. But look for Christ and you will find Him, and with Him everything else thrown in. C. S. Lewis

Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 23:7; Level 2: Proverbs 23:12-17
Anchored to the Rock: If man is man and God is God, to live without prayer is not merely an awful thing, it is infinitely a foolish thing. Phillips Brooks

From God to Us to Others

From God to Us to Others

Dr. Ray Prichard, President of Keep Believing Ministries (keepbelievingministries.com) was one of our keynote speakers for our Memorial Day Weekend Conference. Ray’s Bible teaching is practical and easy to wrap your head around. This is an article from his website that is so powerful. If you’d like to order the messages of the weekend, you can download from our website or watch the archived video: www.americaskeswick.org

Those things must go … and be replaced with something much better. “Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you” (v. 32).

Kindness speaks of gentleness in the face of provocation. It reaches out to the unworthy and withholds punishment even when it is deserved. Kindness is daring and dangerous because some mistake it for weakness. It is “the oil that lubricates the machinery of life.”

Compassionate comes from a word that means “good intestines” because the ancients thought the intestines and the bowels were the seat of the emotions. We mean something similar when we speak of a belly laugh. Compassion says, “I will care for you and I will not shut you out.”

The key to forgiveness is the middle syllable—give. Forgiveness is a gift we give to those who don’t deserve it. Note that verse 32 starts with us and ends with God. We are kind, compassionate and forgiving to others because that’s how God has treated us.

From God … to us … to others.
We do for others what God has done for us. We have been forgiven; we know what it is like. Now do the same for others. We are not left to wonder what it means to forgive those who have hurt us.
You cannot understand God’s love unless you go to the cross.
Dr. Ray Prichard
Keepbelievingministries.com
You cannot understand the cross unless you see in it God’s love.
His death became a sacrifice that was a sweet aroma to the Father (Ephesians 5:1-2). Man’s murder became God’s sacrifice. A heinous crime paid an impossible debt. Through the death of an innocent man, we the guilty go free. If we had been there, the stench of death would have overwhelmed us, but the cross smelled good to the Father. The work of salvation was finally done:
See, from his hands, his feet, his head
Sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did e’er such love or sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
This text ties the most practical spiritual duties with the loftiest spiritual truths:
No more trash talk.
No more bitterness.
No more wrath.
No more anger.
No more clamor.
No more slander.
No more malice.
No more making the Spirit weep within you.
Powerful truth for you and me.  Thanks, Ray! – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick

GPS – God’s Positioning System: 1 Kings 15:1-24; Psalm 123; Proverbs 4
Compass Pointers: Keep your life so constant in its contact with God that His surprising power may break out on the right hand and on the left. Always be in a state of expectancy, and see that you leave room for God to come in as He likes. – Oswald Chambers
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6
Anchored to the Rock: To give prayer the secondary place is to make God secondary in life’s affairs. E. M. Bounds

Seeking Recognition

Seeking Recognition
But we have renounced the things hidden because of shame, not walking in craftiness or adulterating the word of God, but by manifestation of truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God. 2 Corinthians 4:2
Great devotional. Call us today
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Over the years I have done battle with the area of the need of self-recognition. I have to keep going back to the cross with this issue, and so I was grateful to read Glynn Evans’ insights on this topic from his daily devotional, Daily with the King (Moody Press):

Lord, my discipleship means that I have surrendered the right to be successful. God’s word to every disciple is, “Seekest thou great things for thyself? Seek them not” (Jeremiah 45:5). If I strive to be great in God’s work, I will never make it. Greatness is God’s handiwork, not mine or man’s.
I must let the world come to me; I must not run after it. The world will come to me if I have something to offer it, even as it came to Jesus. The world is surprisingly sharp when it comes to values; it knows whom to seek out for the things it desperately needs. I must not envy the martyr or long for a “famous” suffering.

It takes greater courage to endure the daily irritation and drudgery of a situation where nothing heroic for Christ seems to happen. Suffering for Christ’s sake has its own exhilaration, but where is the exhilaration of the daily trivia of a barren task?

Seeking recognition and attention is characteristic of the worlding, not the disciple of Jesus Christ. Of course, some of God’s servants do receive attention and renown, but the true servant will ignore such honor and strive to call attention to his Lord and Master. He will treat such fame, not as an asset, but as a hindrance, so much “refuse” (Philippians 3:8) unless it enables him to glorify his God.
To serve God unnoticed takes sublime dedication. God is not looking for great men, but for men who will allow Him to manifest Himself greatly in them. My chief end is to glorify God (not myself), and to enjoy Him (not a dazzling name) forever. May I never glory in my wisdom or strength, but in this: that I understand and know Him who is my God (Jeremiah 9:23-24).

You all probably have it all together! I am still in process. I know that I needed to hear this today. Thanks, Lord, for speaking to my heart. – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick
GPS – God’s Positioning System: 2 Chronicles 10-12; Psalm 122; Proverbs 3
Compass Pointers: Old age has its compensations. More than ever I see each day as a gift from God. It is also a time to reflect back on God’s goodness over the years and an opportunity to assure others that God is truly faithful to His promises. – Billy Graham
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6
Anchored to the Rock: The prime need of the church is not men of money nor men of brains, but men of prayer. E. M. Bounds

Nine Things God Won’t Ask You When You Get to Heaven

Nine Things God Won’t Ask When You Get to Heaven
“For me , living is Christ and dying is gain.” Philippians 1:21
It seems like I have been doing a lot of funerals lately, so maybe that is why today’s devotional struck a chord with me.
Here are 9 things that God won’t ask you when you get to heaven:
  1. God won’t ask you want kind of car you drove. He’ll ask you how many people you drove who didn’t have transportation.
  2. God won’t ask you the square footage of your house. He’ll ask you how many people you welcomed into your house.
  3. God won’t ask you about the clothes you had in your closet. He’ll ask how many you helped to clothe.
  4. God won’t ask you what your highest salary was. He’ll ask if you compromised your character to obtain it.
  5. God won’t ask what your job title was. He’ll ask if you performed your job to the best of your ability.
  6. God won’t ask how many friends you had. He’ll ask how many people to whom you were a friend.
  7. God won’t ask in what neighborhood you lived. He’ll ask you how you treated your neighbors.
  8. God won’t ask about the color of your skin. He’ll ask about the content of your character.
  9. God won’t ask why it took you so long to seek salvation. He’ll lovingly take you to your mansion in heaven and not the gates of hell.
Well … there’s something for you to ponder today! What will be our answers? Think about it. – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick
GPS – God’s Positioning System: 1 Kings 12-14; Psalm 121; Proverbs 2
Compass Pointers: How easy it is to blame others for our unhappiness, but we are only unhappy when something other than Christ has become our life. The husband or wife who has Christ as their life, comes to their spousal relationship already satisfied. They do not come continually looking to made happy by another person’s attention; they bring Christ’s life to their spouse. Francis Frangipane
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6
Anchored to the Rock: Prayer honors God, acknowledges his being, exalts his power, adores his providence, secures his aid. – E. M. Bounds

Fresh Air in Exile

Fresh Air in Exile
“Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to all the exiles whom I have sent into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon: Build houses and live in them; plant gardens and eat their produce. Take wives and have sons and daughters; take wives for your sons, and give your daughters in marriage, that they may bear sons and daughters; multiply there, and do not decrease.”  Jeremiah 29:4-6 (ESV)
As I was walking from the graveside service of Dottie Noel I couldn’t help but to wonder how many times this lady uttered my name before the Lord in prayer. “At least 120 times” I told myself, “at least 120 times.” That’s how many days I stayed at the Colony of Mercy. Sometime back in the summer of 2003 I had to pack up some of my meager belongings and go into a part of New Jersey I never heard of and get myself right with The Almighty. I also had some legal issues to contend with and those who were involved with those matters at that time were okay with me going into this “exile” but when I got done with it my obligation to finish out what a State judge placed upon me had to meant or I was going to smell the stale air of a jail cell. So for a season it was better to breathe the fresh air of exile instead of the stale air of jail at home.
As I continued walking I met up with a young man who is at the Colony right now and he also has received this same blessing. When I mentioned to him about the fresh air in exile he also acknowledged the same relief I felt some eight years ago. He began to also share with me how, in small ways, he can see the work of God in his life without him being able to do much about it. As he was telling me about a better vehicle his wife had just gotten he started off by saying “My wife got a new van just the other day” and then went on to say that it may not be really that new but it sure was better than she had. “It’s new to her and that’s what matters” he concluded. We both praised God, thanked Jesus for what has been done and continued our way.
There was lunch after Dottie’s service. I sat at a table with some fellow Colony folk who I have known for some time as well as a new member to Colony clan. A whole pitcher of water was spilled; a Blackberry was saved, laughs were shared, Dottie’s husband, Jack, gave out hugs and words of encouragement to all those who thought they should encourage him, the moment was done and I drove home. Ain’t much of Freedom Fighter there, huh? Well it didn’t end there brothers. God would once again send a reminder about fresh air in exile. It happened Friday night as I watched Dr. Ray Pritchard on Keswick’s live stream give a message from Jeremiah 29 and it wasn’t going to be from those infamous verses we are used to. Oh no not this night.
Dr. Pritchard gave a history lesson into the 29th chapter. He gave us the reason why God did what He did to the nation of Israel back in those days and wanted His people to understand that they still had to serve Him. Just because they weren’t in Israel didn’t mean El Elyon was not with them. Dr. Pritchard then went to say that at that time period it was better to serve God in Babylon than to try and serve Him in Jerusalem. I felt reassured when those words were spoken. It was as if God was saying, “You finally understand this part.” Just as sidebar here; all this was going to be discussed again between myself and my good brother in Christ, Bill Jahns, on Saturday night. I met Bill during my exile in Whiting back in 2003 and I have been blessed beyond measure in our friendship.
Chris Hughes
Exile is a funny word. When we use it in terms of some crazed leader of a fallen nation it takes on the meaning of allowing him to imprison himself. When we read it in God’s word we see it as a punishment of great proportions, not to dismiss it because it still can be so. But this morning I want to convey this this idea about being in exile…it just may be about renewing, refreshing, retooling, rehabilitating and regenerating rather than punishment. At times we forget that all God wants to do is have us understand that we need to reconcile with Him. He is allowed to take us to the extremes to get His message across. He is God and we don’t have to like where He takes us to do it. We don’t want to end up like the ten tribes of Israel that haven’t been heard from for well over two thousand years, do we? – Chris Hughes is a graduate of the Colony of Mercy and is a regular contributor to Freedom Fighter
GPS – God’s Positioning System: 2 Chronicles 9; Psalm 120; Proverbs 1

Compass Pointers: “Civilization has no hope. No hope at all, except through God. God alone can preserve a person, a family, a people group, a nation or any part of civilization that’s worth preserving. Without God, no one, no culture can survive. In fact, left to itself, civilization self-destructs. That’s the bad news. But the good news is that God does love the world and preserves it from experiencing its own complete self-destruction. Through the inexplicable gift of His Son, Jesus, God extends His love.” How God Saved Civilization  James L. Garlow

Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6

Anchored to the Rock: When we miss out on prayer we cause disappointment to Christ, defeat ourselves and delight in the devil. – John Blanchard

How Long?

HOW LONG?

“And a certain woman had a flow of blood for twelve years and had suffered many things from many physicians.  She had spent all that she had and was no better, but rather grew worse.”  (Mark 5:25-26)
            This passage contains a dramatic picture of the effect of a long term illness.  The woman’s physical condition represents the spiritual condition of many.  The nature of her condition was debilitating.  It affected her entire life. In a very real sense life ebbed away and she grew weaker and weaker.

            Do you have a spiritual malady that is draining the life out of you.  Is there a sin in your life that has been allowed to linger so long, possibly for years, that it has slowly and methodically dismantled your fellowship with Christ and your effectiveness for Him?

            Some people think that they can allow a particular sin to remain in their lives with little or no adverse effect.  This is defective thinking, and it underestimates the very nature of sin.  Sin is never static.  It is always in the process of taking a person down to spiritual defeat and death.  “The wages of sin is death.”  Romans 6:23

            The woman in the story before us represents the deteriorating nature of sin. “She had suffered many things from many physicians.  She had spent all that she had and was no better, but rather grew worse” (v.26).  The duration of her condition led to the deterioration of her condition.  And what was true of her in the physical realm will be true of you and me in the spiritual realm.

            One of the greatest heart aches to me as a pastor is to watch people discover and even admit the sin that is ensnaring them and then do nothing about it.  What is the sin that is producing the spiritual deterioration and death in your life?  How long do you intend to allow that sin to remain?

            Can there be deliverance from the sin that so easily besets you?  Yes!  The source of deliverance is also found in this woman.  In verse 27 we see three verbs that describe the action she took.  Freedom from her malady was found in hearing about Jesus and coming to Jesus, and reaching out and touching Jesus.  Hearing, believing and receiving is the answer.

            New life is available to you today.  Why wait? Dr. Roger D. Willmore will be sharing God’s Word this summer at America’s Keswick. He’d love to meet you. Check out the schedule at www.americaskeswick.org  Today’s devotional is from our book, REAL VICTORY FOR REAL LIFE. For information about purchasing a copy, call today: 732-350-1187.

GPS – God’s Positioning System: 1 Kings 10-11; Psalm 119:169-176; Proverbs 31

Compass Pointers: No matter how good the walls and the materials are; if the foundations are not strong, the building will not stand. By and by, in some upper room, a crack will appear; and men will say: “There is the crack; but the cause is the foundation.” So if, in youth, you lay the foundation of your character wrongly, the penalty will be sure to follow. The crack may be far down in old age, but somewhere it will certainly appear. Henry Ward Beecher
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6

Anchored to the Rock: The men upon whose shoulders rested the initial responsibility of Christianizing the world came to Jesus with one supreme request. They did not say, “Lord, teach us to preach”; “Lord, teach us to do miracles”, or “Lord, teach us to be wise” … but they said, “Lord, teach us to pray.” – Billy Graham

Examination Day

A special word of thanks to all of our military serving around the globe to preserve and protect our freedom. May God bless you, and may God bless America!!!

EXAMINATION DAY
“Search me, O God, and know my heart; Try me, and know my anxieties.” (Psalm 139:23)

            We tend to dread exams. Some of us dreaded examination day at school.  Some of us dread going to the doctor and the dentist for our yearly exams.
            The Bible encourages us to take the time to examine our lives. It would be good for us to make this a daily practice in our lives as we begin each day and before we lay our heads on the pillow. The Apostle Paul exhorts us to take time before we participate in the Lord’s Table to examine ourselves. (I Corinthians 11:28).
            “Let us search and examine our ways and turn back to the Lord. Examine me, O Lord, and prove me; try my mind and my heart. Behold, You desire TRUTH in my inward parts, and in the hidden part You will make me to know wisdom. I thought about my ways, and turned my feet to Your testimonies. I made haste, and did not delay to keep Your commandments.
            If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. We have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. And He Himself is the propitiation for our sins. Therefore, brethren, having boldness to enter the Holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way which He consecrated for us, through the veil, that is, His flesh, and having a High Priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.”
            Examination is a good thing. Take some time today to examine your heart. Are you clean before Lord? He longs for you to have a clean heart!  — Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick
GPS – God’s Positioning System: Ecclesiastes 10-12; Psalm 119:161-168; Proverbs 30
Compass Pointers: Our values determine our evaluations. If we value comfort more than character, then trials will upset us. If we value the material and physical more than the spiritual, we will not be able to count it all joy! If we live only for the present and forget about the future, the trials will make us bitter, not better.  Warren W. Wiersbe

Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6
Anchored to the Rock: As a camel kneels before his master to have him remove his burden at the end of the day, so kneel each night and let your Master take your burden. Corrie Ten Boom

Psalm 137 A Great Paraphrase on this Memorial Day Weekend

Psalm 137 – A Great Psalm on this Memorial Day Weekend
Here is a great paraphrase of Psalm 137 that is very fitting for this Memorial Day weekend. It comes from Psalms Now by Leslie Brandt:
How grateful we are, O God,
   for our great country
  for the blessings You lavish upon our land!
How concerned we are, O God,
  that our very nation may become our god
  and that we worship the gifts rather than the Giver!

Is it possible, O God,
  that our laws may circumvent Your will?
  that our freedom may place chains on others?
  that our wealth impoverish someone?
  that our power may came by way of another’s weakness?
  that our enemies may be those who are obedient to You?

Dare we pray, O God,
   that You take away those things that come between us and You?
   that You raise up men who will oppose those institutions and those citizens
   who carelessly, even unconsciously, equate patriotism with allegiance to You?
We do pray, O God,
   that our nation be restored to YOUR objectives
  and that Your children who abide in this land
  dedicate their lives to You and Your purposes.

Hear our prayer, O Lord, on this Sunday before Memorial Day. Please hear our prayer and revive our land. – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick

GPS – God’s Positioning System: Ecclesiastes 7-9; Psalm 119:153-160; Proverbs 29
Compass Pointers:  When the Gospel of Jesus Christ is presented with authority – quoting from the very Word of God – He takes that message and drives it supernaturally into the human heart. – Billy Graham
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 22:4; Level 2: Proverbs 22:1-6
Anchored to the Rock: When problems get Christians praying they do more good than harm. John Blanchard

Systematic Navigation: Sufficiency

Systematic Navigation: Sufficiency  

“But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror. For he looks at himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like. But the one who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, he will be blessed in his doing.”                                                                                                                      James 1:22-25 (ESV) 

In his book, “Systematic Theology”, Wayne Grudem defines the sufficiency of Scripture as follows: The sufficiency of Scripture means that Scripture contained all the woods of God He intended His people to have at each stage of redemptive history, and that it now contains all the words of God we need for salvation, for trusting Him perfectly, and for obeying Him perfectly. This means that those who were alive prior to the birth of Jesus had access to all the words of God that they had needed to live their lives, so all those seemingly annoying little laws had just as much punch as the “Thou Shall Not’s.” No matter what the era was, the Word of God was in the motion of equipping us for every good work. Once we come to salvation we can begin the work on becoming blameless and that will come from being equipped for every good work that is found in Scripture.  

The one thing to realize here is that we will never be able to become totally blameless.  But that shouldn’t deter us from keeping our focus in on what God’s Word has to say to us on any issue either moral or doctrinal. Because within the sufficiency of Scripture we can receive the confidence that we will be able to find out what God would have us think or do in any given area of our lives. We can spend our time reading what other theologians or commentators have written on those matters, either moral or doctrinal, but it may not give us a true north to go on. What we might be able to glean from them is how God’s Word influenced them during their points in history and see if it can reflect on the present. But invariably we should conclude that it is more of a quest to understand what God, Himself, has to say to us and not so much what man may have already thought He said.  

When, for in those moments where we think we can get by on the “What He had already said to that for that time” we need to think again. Look at how long it took to write the amount of Scripture that we have today. At each stage of redemptive history we got another morsel to sink our teeth into. As our Tuesday night Bible study had plainly agreed on, He is unchanged in what He says throughout the whole Text…just like a straight line. I, myself, see this as a “Deuteronomical” straight line that gets reinforced by Jesus as He gave His “ Sermon on the Mount”, and then in application as we work our way through the Gospels up to the Revelation of John. Where, by the time you get to this book, you pray that you have been able to apply God’s Word with all your heart, soul and strength.

Before the death of Moses, God had him pen the first five books of the Bible. Those five books were sufficient enough for God’s people at that time. But as time went on we need to understand that when God wanted more of His word reveal He decided the who, what and where of his Word. For example, in Deuteronomy he had Moses pen this, “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.” (Deut 29:29 ESV) It is from this point where the need of salvation springboards into the rest of the Biblical writings that only God could inspire. No words of man could ever measure up or beyond God’s own reason for telling us that we need His redemption and reconciliation.  

Paul had asked that the thorn in his flesh be removed and was told by God, “My grace is sufficient”. It would also be reasonable to believe that if we are navigating life Biblically that the words found in His instruction manual are just as sufficient. All of those self-help guru’s out there in T.V. land are in a constant state of reinvention. God’s Word is in a constant state of regeneration. Where in the rules of man’s reinvention change because of his dissatisfaction, the rules of God’s regeneration remain constant to His satisfaction. And it is in that where we are confident that we are getting a true north. — Chris Hughes is a graduate of the Colony of Mercy and a regular contributor to Freedom Fighter

GPS – God’s Positioning System: Ecclesiastes 4-6; Psalm 119:145-152; Proverbs 28
Compass Pointers: “God can teach more than even the most experienced Christians know. He can teach you better than all the books that the world has ever seen. But be careful about your motives in this eager chase after knowledge. You are aware, aren’t you, that all we need is to be poor in spirit, and to know nothing but Christ and Him crucified.”  “Let Go” Fenelon

Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 21:2-3; Level 2: Proverbs 21:1-5
Anchored to the Rock: We need more Christians for what prayer is the FIRST resort, not the last. John Blanchard

The Will of God

The Will of God
Tonight starts our kick-off to our 87th summer Bible conference season at America’s Keswick. We’d love to have you drive in for our Memorial Day Weekend Conference which runs Friday evening through Monday morning. Check out our website for times. Drs. Ron Cline and Ray Pritchard will be sharing God’s Word. All sessions will be live-streamed: http://www.americaskeswick.org

And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect. Romans 12:2 (NASB)
Over the years I have seen this little poem and I ran across it again today. It is a great reminder about the will of God for our lives:
The will of God will never take you
Where the grace of God cannot keep you,
Where the arms of God cannot support you,
Where the riches of God cannot supply your needs,
Where the power of God cannot endow you.

The will of God will never take you
Where the Spirit of God cannot work through you,
Where the wisdom of God cannot teach you,
Where the army of God cannot protect you,
Where the hands of God cannot mold you.

The will of God will never take you
Where the love of God cannot enfold you,
Where the mercies of God cannot sustain you,
Where the peace of God cannot calm your fears,
Where the authority of God cannot overrule you.

The will of God will never take you
Where the comfort of God cannot dry your tears,
Where the Word of God cannot feed you,
Where the miracles of God cannot be done for you,
Where the omnipresence of God cannot find you. – Author Unknown

A very powerful reminder for you and me today. – Bill Welte is President and CEO of America’s Keswick
GPS – God’s Positioning System: Ecclesiastes 1-3; Psalm 119:137-144; Proverbs 27
Compass Pointers: To know the will of God is our greatest knowledge. To do the will of God is our greatest achievement. George W. Truett
Navigation Rules to Memorize: Level 1: Proverbs 21:2-3; Level 2: Proverbs 21:1-5
Anchored to the Rock: To attempt any work for God without prayer is as futile as trying to launch a space probe from a peashooter. John Blanchard