Out Of The Ordinary! Abraham!
"Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all
nations you will be my treasured possession. - Exodus 19:5 "
Abraham was a most remarkable man. From Genesis 12 to the end of the
Bible, he and his descendants are almost the only subject of the
divinely inspired Word
of God.
Here is a man whom both
Christian
and Jew claim as the father of their faith. He is even mentioned in the
Koran, the holy book of the Muslim religion, in 188 verses. What was it
that made Abraham so remarkable? He simply did what God said to do.
Abraham OBEYED God!
As Hebrews 11:8 says, "By
faith
Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as
his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he
was going. " Abraham's willingness to pack up his family and all his
belongings to move to an unknown land is one of the first indications of
his commitment to the Lord.
Maybe the Lord has spoken to you recently through His Word about mending
a relationship with a friend or family member, or about meeting Him
faithfully every morning in a quiet time of prayer. Perhaps He has
spoken to you about sharing Christ with a neighbor or coworker.
If God has given you a marching order, I suggest you OBEY and be blessed!
Most of us don't have spectacular calls from God. But we can obediently
answer all those ordinary calls. And that kind of obedience makes an
impact on life. God called; Abraham obeyed. Simple faith, simple
obedience. An extraordinary result.
Prayer:
"Lord, increase my faith to follow You wherever You lead. Amen.
"
Sometimes what God asks us to do goes against all human logic; that is
when God is most honored by our obedience.
Christian friend, what is God calling YOU to do today? Well, get busy
and be obedient to The Great "I am that I am" and receive your
blessing!
Daily Smile:
This police officer sees an old lady driving and knitting at the same
time so after driving next to her for awhile he yells to her,"PULLOVER".
She replies,"No a pair of socks".
In The News:
Boston Bombings Suspect Will Face Criminal Charges, Not Be Designated Enemy Combatant
The surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings has been charged, the Justice Department announced Monday. CNN reports that
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has been charged in federal court with use of a
weapon of mass destruction and malicious destruction of property
resulting in death. He could face the death penalty if convicted.
Tsarnaev, 19, made his initial appearance Monday before Magistrate Judge
Marianne B. Bowler in his hospital room at Beth Israel Deaconess
Hospital in Boston. The decision to charge Tsarnaev in civilian court
put an end to speculation that he would be charged as an enemy
combatant, a designation sometimes used against terrorists. White House
spokesman Jay Carney said the decision not to treat Tsarnaev as an enemy
combatant was "absolutely the right way to go and the appropriate way
to go." Carney said that because Tsarnaev is a naturalized U.S. citizen,
he cannot be tried by a military commission. Despite being seriously
wounded and heavily sedated, Tsarnaev has begun responding to brief questions from his hospital bed, officials said.
Badly Wounded Boston Marathon Bombing Suspect Responding to Questions
Despite a serious throat wound preventing him from speaking, the
surviving Boston Marathon bombing suspect is beginning to respond to
questions from investigators, according to federal officials, NBC News reports.
Nearly 48 hours after he was taken into custody following an intense
gun battle and manhunt, 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was communicating
with a special team of federal investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess
Hospital. Word that the badly wounded suspect was able to communicate
with authorities came as a surprise, especially after details about the
severity of his injuries began to emerge. Tsarnaev, who remains in
serious condition, was responding to questions mostly in writing because
of the throat wound, according to the officials. The throat wound may
be the result of a suicide attempt, investigators said. Officials are
hoping to glean more information about the twin blasts last Monday at
the finish line of the Boston Marathon, which killed three people and
injured more than 170, and determine whether Tsarnaev and his older
brother, Tamerlan, who was killed in a gun battle with police Thursday
night, received assistance from others.
Relief Teams Rush Aid to China Quake Survivors
Rescuers and relief teams are rushing supplies to rural provinces in
China after a deadly earthquake over the weekend, CBN News reports.
The 7.0 quake struck parts of Sichuan province Saturday morning,
killing at least 188 people and injuring more than 11,000. The quake
triggered landslides, cutting off roads and disrupting phone and power
connections in the mountainous region. The Chinese Red Cross has
deployed relief teams with food, water and medicine, and rescuers are
still struggling to find survivors. "We are searching in a method called
'dragnet,'" said Chen Xiuyu, company commander of the Chengdu military
region. "The method means we will search every village, every house, and
will never give up trying to save the life of every resident." The
quake was among the deadliest China has seen in the past three years.
More Millennials Buy House Before Getting Married
Millennial couples are more likely to buy a house together before they
take their wedding vows than their parents and grandparents were, according to
a new Coldwell Banker Real Estate survey. Almost a quarter of married
homeowners aged 18 to 34 bought a home together before they were
married, compared with 14 percent of those aged 45 and older. "We didn't
expect to find that couples committed to each other to buy homes before
they were married," says Robi Ludwig, a psychotherapist who works for
Coldwell on lifestyle surveys and buyer habits. "It's almost like buying
a home is the new engagement ring." The online survey of 2,116 adults
March 8-12 found that couples who bought homes before marriage were all
planning to tie the knot. "Increasingly, Americans and especially
millennials see marriage as something that should be entered into only
after you've taken several steps toward showing your maturity," says
Stephanie Coontz, co-chair of the Council on Contemporary Families.
"It's not something you jump into." Two-thirds of couples getting
married these days lived together before they walked the aisle; buying a
home together is a big proof of commitment.
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