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Charles Dickens: Serve others by lightening their burdens and showing them love

“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another…Have a heart that never hardens, a temper than never tires, and a touch that never hurts.”

Charles Dickens (1812-1870) as recounted in Quote Junkie “Words to Live By” Edition (Hagopian Institute, 2008) 29.

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Grace Unplugged: “All I Ever Needed” by AJ Michalka

Honestly it’s time for honesty

My heart is on my sleeve

Oh will you hear me out?

I’ve got nothing left to give of me
I gave up everything

So there is nothing left to lose for me now

But you forgive me somehow 

I’ve chased a million things
Bright lights and empty dreams
Now here I am
Right where I thought I wanted to be
I’ll trade it all right now
Leave it all and lay it down
To get back to where I belong
Lord all I’ve ever needed was your love.

Truth be told I made this world my home
I let it steal my soul, but now I want it back
Cause all I need is waiting
In your arms a place to hang my heart
Where I am known at last
You’re the one true thing I have

I’ve chased a million things
Bright lights and empty dreams
Now here I am
Right where I thought I wanted to be
I’ll trade it all right now
Leave it all and lay it down
To get back to where I belong
Lord all I’ve ever needed was your love.

And I know that I was meant to be
More than just a melody
I know that You had hopes for me

I hope you still believe in me…

I’ve chased a million things
Bright lights and empty dreams
Now here I am
Right where I thought I wanted to be
I’ll trade it all right now
Leave it all and lay it down
To get back to where I belong
Lord all I’ve ever needed was your love
Lord all I’ve needed was Your love

“All I’ve Ever Needed” is the hit single from the must-see movie, Grace Unplugged. Go see the movie, and check out this music video starring AJ Michalka.

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Ashley S. Johnson: A school can be run on the promises of God!

“A business man invests what he has increases his business by putting into it a part of his profits. But I spend my capital and income and then wait for more! It is like the manna in the wilderness. I use what comes in today, keeping nothing for the morrow, confidently believing that our Father looks ahead and moves the hearts of His friends and ours to keep the stream moving.

I do not try to lay up money for future use. This is not consistent with the growth of faith which I desire and must have. I have found that if faith grows it must have something to do. I give mine the right of way. It is a contradiction to say a man trusts God to supply his needs when he has enough laid up to last him his whole life…

I freely admit that such an effort has its difficulties, some of which are very grave, but I am willing to give my brief life to the demonstration that a school can be run on the promises of God. If I fail, it will not be any more than many others have done. If I succeed, the whole brotherhood: schools, churches, and missionary enterprises will receive an inspiration which they will not be slow to acknowledge.”

Ashley S. Johnson (1857-1925) The Story of a Hundred Dollars: My Testimony Concerning the Faithfulness of God (Knoxville: Johnson Bible College: 1898, reprinted 1993) 9-10.

I must acknowledge Philip Eubanks, a student from my D.Min course at TEDS this summer. He gave me this book written by the founder of Johnson Bible College, now Johnson University. What a blessing!

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Phil Vischer: Are you drinking this cocktail?

“We’re drinking a cocktail that’s a mix of the Protestant work ethic, the American dream, and the gospel. And we’ve intertwined them so completely that we can’t tell them apart anymore. Our gospel has become a gospel of following your dreams and being good so God will make all your dreams come true. It’s the Oprah god. So I had to peel that apart. I realized I’m not supposed to be pursuing impact, I’m supposed to be pursuing God. And when I pursue God I will have exactly as much impact as He wants me to have.”

Phil Vischer, founder and former CEO of VeggieTales, in an interview titled, It’s Not About the Dream. Before his multi-million dollar company went bankrupt, Phil also made the mistake of making his dream more important than knowing Christ.

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Joe Dorcey: What are you depending on to do God’s work?

And [Jesus] sent [the twelve] out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal the sick. He told them: “Take nothing for the journey—no staff, no bag, no bread, no money, no extra shirt.” Luke 9:2-3

“They must travel light—only take what was essential and leave behind whatever would distract them—in order to concentrate on the task of speaking the Word of the God…The Lord wants his disciples to be dependent on him, not on themselves.”

Then Jesus asked them, “When I sent you without purse, bag or sandals, did you lack anything?” “Nothing,” they answered. Luke 22:35

Joe Dorcey in The Redemptorists of the Denver Province blogpost for 3 October 2013.

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I. Howard Marshall: The Cost of Discipleship

So, therefore, whoever of you does not renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple. Luke 14:33

“Discipleship means saying a final ‘good-bye’ to one’s possessions. Just as one cannot attempt a venture without having sufficient resources to complete it, but will need to put everything into it in order to be successful, so the disciple must be continually ready (present tense) to give up all that he’s got in order to follow Jesus.”

I. Howard Marshall exegetical notes on Luke 14:33 in The New International Greek Commentary: The Gospel of Luke (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1978).

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John Calvin: We are not our own

“If we, then, are not our own (cf. 1 Cor 6:19) but the Lord’s, it is clear what error we must flee, and whither we must direct all the acts of our life. We are not our own: let not our reason nor our will, therefore, sway our plans and deeds. We are not our own: let us therefore not set it as our goal to seek what is expedient for us according to the flesh. We are not our own: in so far as we can, let us therefore forget ourselves and all that is ours.”

John Calvin (1509-1564) in Institutes of the Christian Religion, comments from 82. “The Christian Life”, chapter 7, “The Sum of the Christian Life: The Denial of Ourselves.”

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The Brothers of John the Steadfast: The Church Offering

“How often have we heard, “all the church cares about is money?” To such a person, the offering becomes an opportunity to rationalize his hostile attitude. The offering isn’t really meant for such a person. As a matter of fact, it has been my experience that giving doesn’t come by way of the new convert either.

Offerings spring out of the deep—the deepness of abiding in Christ’s grace. When people mature in Christ, offerings can flow more freely. Indeed, the Christian offers his whole life up to God as a response to His mercy (Romans 12:1-2). The offering only makes sense when seen in the light of Christ. When Christ holds the strings to open my heart, He will in time hold the purse strings as well.”

John the Steadfast (1468-1532), was Elector of Saxony and known as the first Protestant of the Reformation. The Brothers of John the Steadfast celebrate his legacy, and this excerpt comes from their “Notes on the Liturgy #15” by Oberdieck and Mathey.

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Philipp Melanchthon: What is necessary for living a good life?

“What is necessary for living a good life? Namely, the fear of God, faith, and good works.”

Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560) protestant reformer and educator known as the “Teacher of Germany” in Instructions for the Visitors of Parish Pastors in Electoral Saxony composed in 1520 with Martin Luther (cf. Luther’s Works v. 40, trans. C. Bergendoff (Philadelphia: Lehmann, 1958) 318.

I have the privilege of training the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod clergy and lay leaders of Louisiana the first part of this week in “Duck Dynasty” country. The simplicity of Melanchthon’s quote reminds me of the Duck Commander T-shirt I think wonderfully captures this idea in this southern context: “Fear God, Love your Neighbor, Hunt Ducks!”

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Martin Luther: May we never be found without works toward our neighbors

“A man does not live for himself alone in the mortal body to work for it alone, but he lives also for all men on earth; rather, he lives only for others and not for himself. To this end he brings his body into subjection that he may the more sincerely and freely serve others…He cannot ever in this life be idle and without works toward his neighbor.”

Martin Luther (1483-1546) excerpt from “The Freedom of a Christian” (1520) in Martin Luther: Selections from His Writing, ed. John Dillenberger (New York: Random House, 1962) 73.

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