How to Deal


Prayer: Abraham’s plea for Sodom
March 28, 2008, 12:39 am
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Genesis 18:23

Will you sweep away the righteous with the wicked? What if there are fifty righteous people in the city?  Will you really sweep it away and not spare the place for the sake of the fifty righteous people in it?  Far be it from you to do such a thing – to kill the righteous with the wicked, treating the righteous and the wicked alike.  Far be it from you!  Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?

The Lord said, ‘If I find fifty righteous people in the city of Sodom, I will spare the whole place for their sake.”

The Abraham spoke up again, ‘ Now that I have been so bold as to speak to the Lord, though I am nothing but dust and ashes, what if the number of the righteous is five less than fifty?  Will you destroy the whole city for lack of five people?’

‘If I find forty-five there,’ he said, ‘I will not destroy it.’

Once again he spoke to him, ‘What if only forty are found there?’

He said, ‘For the sake of forty, I will not do it.’

Then he said, ‘May the Lord not be angry, but let me speak. What if only thirty can be found there?’

He answered, ‘I will not do it if I find thirty there.’

Abraham said, ‘ Now that I have been so bold as to speak to the Lord, what if only twenty can be found there?’

He said, ‘ For the sake of twenty, I will not destroy it.’

Then he said, ‘May the Lord not be angry, but let me speak just once more.  What if only ten can be found there?’

He answered, ‘For the sake of ten, I will not destroy it.’

When the Lord had finished speaking with Abraham, he left, and Abraham returned home.



Repetitive Prayers.
March 17, 2008, 10:30 am
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Should we continually ask and seek God about the same things, or is just once enough?

It’s not like God forgets what we asked for the first time.   But should we really be like the persistant widow in Luke who keeps pestering the judge? 

Are we pestering God by asking and seeking for answers that we’ve already approached Him with?

In Romans 1:9, Paul says he “constantly” remembers the believers in Rome in his prayers. 

I just want to point out verse 26 of the same chapter.  Who says homosexuality is not addressed in the bible:

“Because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts.  Even their women exchanged natural sexual relations for unnatural ones.  In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one another.  Men committed shameful acts with other men, and recieved in themselves the due penalty for their error.”

I wonder if the “due penalty” refers to sexually transmitted diseases.



Proverbs 1
March 17, 2008, 10:23 am
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“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction.”

Interesting to me is a footnote (TNIV Bible).  Apparently, the word “fool” in the Olrd Testament usually denotes a person who is morally deficient.  Did not know that . . .



Books to read.
March 12, 2008, 2:04 am
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The Bipolar Disorder Survival Guide, by some guy with a Jewish name.

Mere Christianity, C.S. Lewis

The Power of Intention, by Dr. Wayne Dyer

Facing your Giants, by Max Lucado

Wild at Heart and Waking the Dead, by John Eldredge

Boundaries, by Henry Cloud and John Townsend

John Bevere books

A Closer Walk, Catherine Marshall

Velvet Elvis

to be continued . . .



Continued from March 2; March 3, Spring Break
March 12, 2008, 1:59 am
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The next reading was from John Henry Newman and guess what that was about?  Fasting.

“Newman sees fasting as an accompanying means to the work of prayer; that is to say prayer is the overarching category under which fasting functions.  Often our renewed interest in fasting has a tendency to exalt it beyond all scripture and reason.  No, fasting has a vital but always subordinate function in the ongoing life of prayer.”



From March 2, spring break.
March 12, 2008, 1:56 am
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Today I read out of the spiritual classics book.  The first excerpt I read was from Catherine Marshall.  I don’t know much about her except what was in the little biography section.  I would like to read her book A Closer Walk.

The excerpt I read was her personal account of fasting from critical-ness.  Through her fast God showed her:

1) A critical spirit focuses on ourselves and makes us unhappy.  We lose perspective and humor.

2) A critical spirit blocks the positive creative thoughts God longs to give us.

3) A critical spirit can prevent good relationships between individuals and often produces retaliatory critical-ness.

4) Criticalness blocks the work of the Spirit of God: love, good will, mercy.

5) Wheneveer we see something genuinely wrong in another person’s behaivor, rather than cirticize him or her directly, or far worse, gripe about him behind his back, we should ask the Sprit of God to do the correction needed.

Her prayer (and mine) was this:

“Lord, I repent of this sin of judgement.  I am deeply sorry for having committed so gross an offense against you and against myself so contiunally.  I claim your promise of forgiveness and seek a new beginning.”