October 19, 2006
I just got Oswald Chambers’ If You Will Ask, and I’m already loving it, one chapter in. According to Chambers, prayer “develops the life of God in us” and “nourishes” that life; in other words, if we don’t pray, we are starving ourselves. That’s a sobering thought!
He goes on to say the life of God in us
is nourished by refusing to worry over anything, for worry means there is something over which we cannot have our own way… Never let anything push you to your wits’ end, because you will get worried, and worry makes you self-interested and disturbs the nourishment of the life of God. Give thanks to God that He is there, no matter what is happening.…
He concludes his discussion of worry with this beautiful thought:
The secret of Christian quietness is not indifference, but the knowledge that God is my Father, He loves me, and I shall never think of anything He will forget, and worry becomes an impossibility.
I shall never think of anything He will forget: this is one of those Selah moments. Pause, and calmly think about that!
The chapter ends with a prayer from Chambers’ journal:
O Lord, this day may your beauty and grace and soothing peace be in me and upon me. May no wind or weather or anxiety ever touch Your beauty and Your peace in my life or in this place.
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October 16, 2006
Yesterday, I wrote about living with God, “making the Lord your dwelling place,” as Psalm 91 says. It occurred to me after I had finished that for many of us–and I include myself here–God as refuge, fortress, and hiding place is more about visits to a vacation home or evacuation to a storm shelter than […]
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