Our regret, or more accurately, what fuels our regret, is a telling symptom of our soul's posture before God. Our regret reveals just how deeply the gospel has taken root in our heart.
Our regret, or more accurately, what fuels our regret, is a telling symptom of our soul's posture before God. Our regret reveals just how deeply the gospel has taken root in our heart.
This is an adaptation of a recent sermon I gave on the subject of local church leadership.
Do you want to make sense of more of your daily reading in Scripture? Then I suggest that listening through the following 30 minutes or so will not be a waste of your time.
The heroes of our Tribe may be giants of the faith, but there is only one object of our faith—fix your eyes on Jesus.
It has to be possible to labour with all the might God will graciously grant us to tear down the walls that have hemmed us in, break new ground, sow the seed, water the crop, and earnestly fall on our knees before the Lord of the harvest; crying out, "Lord, give the growth!"
"Let my sighs give way to songs that sing about your faithfulness
Let my pain reveal your glory as my only real rest
Let my losses show me all I truly have is you."
Some people say, ‘act like a man’. I like to say, ‘become a man’. The world has enough actors. But the world doesn’t have enough men—real men.
To simply exist in the presence of Jesus, to find your soul's satisfaction in Him, is to find peace and contentment; even in the hurried and anxious world we live in.
Removing the junk aids in rediscovering the treasure. Items that have sat unnoticed and unappreciated suddenly light up the room, elicit smiles on faces, and invite laughter. And from the deep, dark recesses of our minds, ancient wisdom is recalled, “Better is a little with the fear of the Lord than great treasure and trouble with it.” (Proverbs 15:16, ESV).