Pages

LAST GENERATION "Good News" MID-DAY FEATURED DEVOTIONALS # 11-15 Thursday April 26 2012 Iyar 4, 5772

LAST GENERATION  

"Good News"  

MID-DAY FEATURED DEVOTIONALS# 11-15

Thursday  

April 26 2012  

Iyar 4, 5772

>#11

HOME  |  CONTACT US  |  ONLINE GIVING |  DEVOTIONAL

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

 THURSDAY, April 26, 2012

Christ is the Center

For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.

1 Corinthians 3:11

I have circled this verse in my Bible. I do not ever want to forget it. The foundation is Jesus Christ. He settles the issue. It is not the Catholics, Lutherans, Baptists, Calvary Chapel, it is Jesus Christ. He is the Rock of our salvation. He is the Rock of theology. He is it, bottom line.

Paul made sure, all the way through the letter, the center of the Christianity is Christ. That is the foundation. The foundation is Christ.

Jesus told us He is the Rock in Luke 6:47-48, Whoever comes to Me, and hears My sayings and does them, I will show you whom he is like: He is like a man building a house, who dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock. And when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently against that house, and could not shake it, for it was founded on the rock.

Wow, amazing. Jesus Christ, the Rock of our salvation. My testimony, my life, my study, my giving, my teaching, everything has to be centered in Christ. The more Christ, the better your ministry will be.

Now, if Christ is the foundation, if He is the Rock, why would you build on anything else? When your world seems to be collapsing around you, turn to Christ, the Rock of your salvation.

How divinely supreme is our Lord above all others!
-D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones-

 WEDNESDAY, April 25, 2012

 TUESDAY, April 24, 2012

 MONDAY, April 23, 2012

 SUNDAY, April 22, 2012

 SATURDAY, April 21, 2012

 FRIDAY, April 20, 2012

 THURSDAY, April 19, 2012

 WEDNESDAY, April 18, 2012

 TUESDAY, April 17, 2012

 MONDAY, April 16, 2012

 SUNDAY, April 15, 2012

 SATURDAY, April 14, 2012

 FRIDAY, April 13, 2012

 THURSDAY, April 12, 2012

 WEDNESDAY, April 11, 2012

 TUESDAY, April 10, 2012

 MONDAY, April 09, 2012

 SUNDAY, April 08, 2012

 SATURDAY, April 07, 2012

 FRIDAY, April 06, 2012

 THURSDAY, April 05, 2012

 WEDNESDAY, April 04, 2012

 TUESDAY, April 03, 2012

 MONDAY, April 02, 2012

 SUNDAY, April 01, 2012

 

 

 

>#12

Thru the Bible with Dr. J. Vernon McGee

LATEST BROADCAST

Deuteronomy 1:36—4:2
Thursday, April 26, 2012

Thru the Bible takes listeners through the entire Bible in just five years, threading back and forth between the Old and New Testaments. You can begin the study at any time. When we've concluded Revelation, we'll start over again in Genesis, so if you're with us for five years you won't miss any part of the Bible.

This message references: Deuteronomy 1:36-4:2
Series: Deuteronomy
Share with your friends

FEATURED OFFER FROM THRU THE BIBLE

Paperback, 192 pp.

Commentary #39 — John, Volume 2
Commentary #39 — John, Volume 2 
Based on Dr. McGee's popular 5-year radio program, these edited messages are invaluable. Studies of each of the Bible books are preceded by an introduction and outline. Each chapter is examined through a careful, paragraph-by-paragraph discussion. Because the Bible speaks to hearts in a way that no other book can, the text of the Scripture being discussed is included. 

ARTICLES FROM DR. J. VERNON MCGEE

Q&A: Should We Pray to the Holy Spirit?
You’ll remember that the Lord Jesus told His apostles, “Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you” (John 16:23).

RESOURCES FROM THRU THE BIBLE

 

>#13

 
Donations
 
 
 

Quick Links

Today's Program Powered by 4 goTandem
 

Back to the Bible Authors: Prayer, Praise and Promises
Print
 
 Timeless Praise by Dr. Warren Wiersbe
 Read Psalm 47:1-9

 

Our praise of God is a timeless act of worship. We can look at this psalm from three different points in time. First, we can view it from the historic past. This is one of three psalms that highlight Hezekiah's great victory over Sennacherib (Ps. 46-8). What did the Lord do for the people of Judah? He came down (vv. 1-4), went up (v. 5) and sat down (vv. 8,9). This is a picture of what the Lord did for us: He came to earth to die for our sins, was resurrected and is now seated in heaven.

We also can view this psalm from the prophetic future. Israel has yet to go through the time of Jacob's trouble. But Jesus will come down and win the victory (Rev. 19), and Israel will enter into the glorious praises of the Lord. Today all the nations rage, but in the future they will praise Him. Jesus will come and establish His kingdom and keep His promise to Abraham to multiply his descendants so that they are innumerable.

Or we can view this psalm from the practical present. To worship God means to render to Him all the praise and adoration of our heart--a total response of all we are for all that He is. This psalm gives us hints about worship. First, the center of our worship is God (v. 1). We worship a victorious God. Second, the purpose of our worship is to exalt Him (v. 9). We are to magnify His greatness. Praise is a witness as well as an experience of worship. Let's exalt the Lord, for He is worthy of our praise.

Praising God knows no time boundaries. His people always have and always will praise Him. We praise God to exalt Him and to magnify His greatness. Do you worship Him with praise?

Copyright 1992, used with permission, all rights reserved.
Baker Books, a division of Baker Publishing Group 

Used by permission. All rights to this material are reserved. Material is not to be reproduced, 
scanned, copied, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission from Baker Publishing Group.
Privacy Statement | Comments or Questions? | Employment | Contact Us | Copyright Information


Bookmark and ShareBacktotheBible's Tweet  Find us on Facebook     

 

>#14

 

April 26

Following God's Schedule

Romans 11:33-36

Most of us enjoy feeling in control of our own schedule and grow frustrated when things don't go according to plan. Yet if we truly desire to walk in the center of God's perfect will, we must become willing to cooperate with His time frame.

Consider how you pray about situations in your life. Without realizing it, you may be demanding that God follow the schedule you've constructed according to your very limited human wisdom. Yet if we believe He is who He says He is, how can surrendering to His way not be to our benefit? Think about His unique, praiseworthy qualities:

  • His all-encompassing knowledge. Unlike us, the Lord has complete awareness about our world and the details of every individual life--past, present, and future.
  • His complete wisdom. God understands man's every motive, whereas none of us are able to accurately discern people's intentions. We make choices based on partial information, whereas He has the wisdom to take action based on truth.
  • His unconditional love. Our Creator is always motivated by love and constantly has our best in mind. Unless we trust His heart, our view of reality will be distorted.
  • His perfect sufficiency. At just the right time, God will provide us with everything we need to carry out His plan.

Submitting to God's timetable requires faith and courage. Believe in the goodness of His heart and His plans--and determine to wait until He gives the signal to move forward. Then, as you follow His schedule, you'll experience the joy of watching Him make all things beautiful in His timing.

For more biblical teaching and resources from Dr. Charles Stanley, please visit www.intouch.org.

Used with permission from In Touch Ministries, Inc. © 2009 All Rights Reserved.

Recently on In Touch with Dr. Charles Stanley

GO

Charles Cowman Streams in the Desert Daily Devotional

April 26

An Hour In The Garden

"He went up into a mountain apart to pray: and when evening was come, he was there alone" (Matt. 14:23).

The man Christ Jesus felt the need of perfect solitude -- Himself alone, entirely by Himself, alone with Himself. We know how much intercourse with men draws us away from ourselves and exhausts our powers. The man Christ Jesus knew this, too, and felt the need of being by Himself again, of gathering all His powers, of realizing fully His high destiny, His human weakness, His entire dependence on the Father.

How much more does the child of God need this--himself alone with spiritual realities, himself alone with God the Father. If ever there were one who could dispense with special seasons for solitude and fellowship, it was our Lord. But He could not do His work or maintain His fellowship in full power, without His quiet time.

Would God that every servant of His understood and practiced this blessed art, and that the Church knew how to train its children into some sense of this high and holy privilege, that every believer may and must have his time when he is indeed himself alone with God. Oh, the thought to have God all alone to myself, and to know that God has me all alone to Himself!
--Andrew Murray

***

Lamertine speaks in one of his books of a secluded walk in his garden where his mother always spent a certain hour of the day, upon which nobody ever dreamed for a moment of intruding. It was the holy garden of the Lord to her. Poor souls that have no such Beulah land! Seek thy private chamber, Jesus says. It is in the solitude that we catch the mystic notes that issue from the soul of things.

A MEDITATION

My soul, practice being alone with Christ! It is written that when they were alone He expounded all things to His disciples. Do not wonder at the saying; it is true to thine experience. If thou wouldst understand thyself send the multitude away. Let them go out one by one till thou art left alone with Jesus. . . . Has thou ever pictured thyself the one remaining creature in the earth, the one remaining creature in all the starry worlds?

In such a universe thine every thought would be "God and I! God and I!" And yet He is as near to thee as that--as near as if in the boundless spaces there throbbed no heart but His and thine. Practice that solitude, O my soul! Practice the expulsion of the crowd! Practice the stillness of thine own heart! Practice the solemn refrain "God and I! God and I!" Let none interpose between thee and thy wrestling angel! Thou shalt be both condemned and pardoned when thou shalt meet Jesus alone!
--George Matheson



Purchase your own copy of this devotional.
Or, catch up on 
Streams in the Desert in our Archives.

Editors' Picks

Translate