Some people worship:
Green grass White snow Gray deer
Beige beaches Coppertone tans Blue water
Red houses Black cars or R a i n b o w trout
– eab, 2/80
Posted in eabits, nature, philosophy, uncategorized, worship on July 16, 2009| Leave a Comment »
– eab, 2/80
Posted in poem, the home, uncategorized, worship, tagged and beyond, before the fall, family altar, God is Light, learned in Family Altar, no darkness, since man fell, the past, the present, words penned by John on July 16, 2009| Leave a Comment »
– eab, 7/76
Posted in died today, holy living, QQQuaint Quality Quotes, today in history, uncategorized, tagged 1972, 7/16/1931, a child of privilege, a night of prayer, as though He were deaf could not understand our language, ‘Before they call I will answer’, before we told Him, C T Studd, Central Africa, Chapel bell, Charles Thomas Studd, Christian Literature Crusade, died this date, either reverence or common sense, famous cricket player, Ft. Washington, heart were relieved, His Son, human source, I want to run a Rescue Shop, in the Congo, in the heart of China, India, keep on talking to God, knew nothing of our circumstances, live within the sound of Church, mail came once a fortnight, no apparent hope, Norman Grubb, or as He said himself, or the extremity of circumstances, or the weight of the words, PA, part of the “Cambridge Seven”, served God in China, starvation stared us in the face, supplies was finished, the postman, We got down on our knees, we had to say in twenty minutes, We had told God everything, We looked facts in the face, we must have stayed there twenty minutes, Who said that God knew everything, within a yard of hell on July 16, 2009| Leave a Comment »
“My own family knew nothing of our circumstances, only that we were in the heart of China. The last of our supplies was finished, and there was no apparent hope of supplies coming from any human source. The mail came once a fortnight. The mail man had just set out that afternoon, and in a fortnight he would bring the return mail. The children were put to bed. Then my wife came to my room. We looked facts in the face. If the return of the postman brought no relief, starvation stared us in the face. We decided to have a night of prayer. We got down on our knees for that purpose. I think we must have stayed there twenty minutes before we arose again. We had told God everything that we had to say in twenty minutes. Our hearts were relieved; it not seem to us either reverence or common sense to keep on talking to God as though He were deaf or could not understand our simple language, or the extremity of our circumstances, or the weight of the words of His Son, Who said that God knew everything before we told Him, or as He said himself, ‘Before they call I will answer.’ And verily He did.”
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Norman Grubb, C T Studd (Ft.Washington, PA: Christian Literature Crusade, 1972), 98
C T (Charles Thomas) Studd died this date, 7/16/1931 in the Congo. He was a child of privilege and famous cricket player who became part of the “Cambridge Seven.” He served God in China, India and Central Africa.
“Some wish to live within the sound of Church or Chapel bell; I want to run a Rescue Shop within a yard of hell.” — C T Studd