Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
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In my daily quiet times, I try to follow the Psalmist admonition to, "Enter His gates with thanksgiving and come into His courts with praise." One old song reminds us to "Count your blessings, name them one by one..." Invariably after recalling God blessings, goodness, faithfulness, provision and protection, I often find myself with a spontaneous rhyme I sing back to the Lord. After all, aren't we exhorted to "Sing and make melody in our hearts to the Lord?"What you're holding in your hands are a variety of poetic songs really; poems that invariably began during my own times of worship. I certainly don't claim to be a Poet Laureate, and I even hesitate to call them poems. I prefer to just call them rhymes. My hope in publishing them is that they will inspire you to reflect again on some aspect of God's awesomeness, power, and beauty. So often we rush through our times with the Lord and fail to "sup with Him" as He desires us to. Many have lost the art of meditation, not only on God's Word, but sadly, on God Himself.Martin Luther taught his children to read the Bible as though they were looking for apples. "First, I shake the whole apple tree, that the ripest might fall. Then I climb the tree and shake each limb, and then each branch, and then each twig-and then I look under each leaf." In the same manner that Luther instructed his children to read the Bible, we too should apply that diligence in our own approach to God's Word. It could well be that in looking under that last leaf we'll glimpse something life transforming that would be completely overlooked by the casual reader.These songs/poems were not written for the speed-reader, but for the meditator. I trust they will inspire, teach, and (more than anything) help you to MAGNIFY the Lord with me.-David Ravenhill
One of my great concerns with regard to this present outpouring is the increasing tendency to build upon "sand" rather than upon the rock of God's Word. How readily we grasp at loose grains of truth rather than the whole rock! As a teacher, I am concerned that we are producing a generation of believers hooked on experiences rather than exposition. We get more excited over some feelings than we do over God's Word. People flock to see some demonstration of God's power, but they run from any desire to know the person of God Himself. We now give more emphasis to praise than we do to prayer, and possessions have replaced passion and purity. Success is no longer measured by character, but by charisma. Gifting has replaced godliness. Put on a gospel concert, and you can fill most auditoriums. Call people to pray, and you can fit them into the smallest room of the church.
Combined with G. Campbell Morgan's classic The Parable of the Father's Heart, author David Ravenhill recasts the prodigal son story into 20th-century settings, citing parallels between the prodigals of yesterday and today. Welcome Home warns and warms the heart, as it not only chronicles the steady downward spiral from prosperity to the pig pen; but it also provides steps leading to full relationship restoration.
It's time to grow up...so that we can fulfill God's purposes for us and for our generation! For too long we've been spiritual children clinging to our mother's leg, refusing to go to school on the first day. Here David Ravenhill, son of the late Leonard Ravenhill and a seasoned pastor himself, challenges the Body of Christ to put away childish things and to mature in the things of God. There is a world that needs to be won to Christ!
A pungent book of messages deliberately designed to motivate Christians to increased prayer and obedience.
The author provides a solid teaching tool for church leaders who are facing not only their own struggles but also reaping the fallout of recent moral failings of nationally well-known church leaders. The author addresses the very real issues of how and wh
Messages about revival. David Wilkerson says of this book, "Leonard Ravenhill writes with the power and unction of John Wesley. It is impossible to read his works and still remain uncommitted."
Straightforward messages designed to avert the death of a "child" among nations.
Every believer eventually has to face the fact that they have an adversary: the devil.Your adversary has one goal in mind and that's to destroy you. How you respond to him will determine whether you live a life of victory or of defeat.This book will show you the steps you must take if you're going to overcome and emerge victorious.The author expounds on the life of King Hezekiah (and the steps he took to overcome the most powerful army of his time) and reveals how the same truths that gave him victory can be applied today in our warfare against our enemy, the devil.You don't have to lose this battle! Start overcoming today!
Genesis reveals that before Israel ever became a nation there was a priesthood, sacrifices, laws, clean and unclean animals as well as a tabernacle etc. These then are the roots of the Jewish faith.
Rad-i-cal: Of or relating to the origin or root. New and different from what is traditional or ordinary. Of change or action, relating to or affecting the fundamental nature of something; far-reaching or thorough. Gone are the days when men walked into church and shook under the convicting power of God's presence. Instead, our dull, dry-eyed preaching tends to comfort the sinner and condone his sin. We need a return to the original New Testament type of praying and preaching. The early Church moved heaven and earth by their prayers; they changed hearts by their preaching. Peter's message on the day of Pentecost pierced his listeners to the heart. This word "pierced" is the same used when the soldier drove his spear into the side of Jesus, on the cross. Following the day of Pentecost, the disciples prayed for confidence and the place where they were gathered was shaken. They were filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the Word of God boldly. If you want to find out how, then read RADICAL.
The best of E.M.Bound's writings on prayer in a single volume. Compiled by Leonard Ravenhill. This is a new release of an old edition that went out of print.
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