Wow. It's like a ghost town around here! I know! Adjusting to life with a third child (who is 2 years old) has seemed to throw me for quite a loop! I do have an update post I'm working on but I wanted to be sure and do a post within the first few days of 2013.
And this devotional I read from Charles Spurgeon this morning seemed so fitting...so much of what I want to focus on this year...(if you're friends with me on Facebook, I posted some of this already today...)
"Continue steadfastly in prayer." Colossians 4:2
It is interesting to consider how large a portion of the Bible is occupied with the subject of prayer, either in furnishing examples, enforcing precepts, or pronouncing promises. We scarcely open the Bible before we read, "People began to call upon the name of the LORD;" and just as we are about to close the volume, the "Amen" of an earnest supplication meets our ear. Instances are plentiful. Here we find a wrestling Jacob - there a Daniel who prayed three times a day - and a David who with all his heart called upon his God. On the mountain we see Elijah; in the dungeon Paul and Silas. We have multitudes of commands, and myriads of promises. What does this teach us, but the sacred importance and necessity of prayer?
We may be certain that whatever God has made prominent in His word, He intended to be conspicuous in our lives.
If He has said much about prayer, it is because He knows we have much need of it. So deep are our necessities that until we are in heaven we must not cease to pray.
Do you need nothing? Then I fear you do not know your poverty.
Have you no mercy to ask of God? Then may the Lord's mercy show you your misery!
A prayerless soul is a Christless soul. Prayer is the lisping of the believing infant, the shout of the fighting believer, the requiem of the dying saint falling asleep in Jesus.
It is the breath, the watchword, the comfort, the strength, the honor of a Christian.
If you are a child of God, you will seek your Father's face and live in your Father's love. Pray that this year you may be holy, humble, zealous, and patient; have closer communion with Christ, and enter more often into the banqueting-house of His love. Pray that you may be an example and a blessing to others, and that you may live more to the glory of your Master.
The motto for this year must be, "Continue...in prayer."
- Taken from Morning and Evening: A New Edition of the Classic Devotional - Charles Spurgeon
And what more can I say to that except AMEN! And AMEN again!
Wednesday, January 02, 2013
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