Welcome to theepiscopalian.com!

     Modules
· Home
· Advertising
· AvantGo
· Content
· Downloads
· Encyclopedia
· FAQ
· Feedback
· Journal
· Private Messages
· Recommend Us
· Reviews
· Search
· Statistics
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· Surveys
· Top 10
· Topics
· Web Links
· Your Account

     Who's Online
There are currently, 8 guest(s) and 0 member(s) that are online.

You are Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here

     Languages
Select Interface Language:


theepiscopalian.com: Daily Bread

Search on This Topic:   
[ Go to Home | Select a New Topic ]

 April 9 -Evening C. H. Spurgeon Morning and Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 9-Evening

"thy gentleness hath made me great." Ps 18:35

   The words are capable of being translated, "thy goodness hath made me great." David gratefully ascribed all his greatness not to his own goodness, but the goodness of God. "Thy providence," is another reading; and providence is nothing more than goodness in action. Goodness is the bud of which providence is the flower, or goodness is the seed of which providence is the harvest. Some render it, "thy help," which is but another word for providence; providence being the firm ally of the saints, aiding them in the service of their Lord. Or again, "thy humility hath made me great." "Thy condescension" may, perhaps, serve as a comprehensive reading, combining the ideas mentioned, including that of humility. It is God’s making himself little which is the cause of our being made great. We are so little, that if God should manifest his greatness without condescension, we should be trampled under his feet; but God, who must stoop to view the skies, and bow to see what angels do, turns his eye yet lower, and looks to the lowly and contrite, and makes them great. There are yet other readings, as for instance, the Septuagint, which reads, "thy discipline"—thy fatherly correction—"hath made me great;" while the Chaldee paraphrase reads, "thy word hath increased me." Still the idea is the same. David ascribes all his own greatness to the condescending goodness of his Father in heaven. May this sentiment be echoed in our hearts this evening while we cast our crowns at Jesus’ feet, and cry, "thy gentleness hath made me great." How marvellous has been our experience of God’s gentleness! How gentle have been his corrections! How gentle his forbearance! How gentle his teachings! How gentle his drawings! Meditate upon this theme, O believer. Let gratitude be awakened; let humility be deepened; let love be quickened ere thou fallest asleep tonight.



Posted by admin on Monday, April 09 @ 16:00:00 EDT (1339 reads)
(Read More... | 681 comments | Score: 0)

 April 8 -Evening C. H. Spurgeon Morning and Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 8-Evening

"I will fear no evil: for thou art with me." Ps 23:4

   Behold, how independent of outward cir*****stances the Holy Ghost can make the Christian! What a bright light may shine within us when it is all dark without! How firm, how happy, how calm, how peaceful we may be, when the world shakes to and fro, and the pillars of the earth are removed! Even death itself, with all its terrible influences, has no power to suspend the music of a Christian’s heart, but rather makes that music become more sweet, more clear, more heavenly, till the last kind act which death can do is to let the earthly strain melt into the heavenly chorus, the temporal joy into the eternal bliss! Let us have confidence, then, in the blessed Spirit’s power to comfort us. Dear reader, are you looking forward to poverty? Fear not; the divine Spirit can give you, in your want, a greater plenty than the rich have in their abundance. You know not what joys may be stored up for you in the cottage around which grace will plant the roses of content. Are you conscious of a growing failure of your bodily powers? Do you expect to suffer long nights of languishing and days of pain? O be not sad! That bed may become a throne to you. You little know how every pang that shoots through your body may be a refining fire to consume your dross—a beam of glory to light up the secret parts of your soul. Are the eyes growing dim? Jesus will be your light. Do the ears fail you? Jesus’ name will be your soul’s best music, and his person your dear delight. Socrates used to say, "Philosophers can be happy without music;" and Christians can be happier than philosophers when all outward causes of rejoicing are withdrawn. In thee, my God, my heart shall triumph, come what may of ills without! By thy power, O blessed Spirit, my heart shall be exceeding glad, though all things should fail me h


Posted by admin on Sunday, April 08 @ 16:00:00 EDT (1182 reads)
(Read More... | 410 comments | Score: 0)

 April 9 -Morning C. H. Spurgeon Morning and Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 9-Morning  Daily Reading: 1Sa 25:1-27:12 Quick Study: 2Sa 1:1-2:32
 

"And there followed him a great company of people, and of women, which also bewailed and lamented him." Lu 23:27
 

   Amid the rabble rout which hounded the Redeemer to his doom, there were some gracious souls whose bitter anguish sought vent in wailing and lamentations—fit music to accompany that march of woe. When my soul can, in imagination, see the Saviour bearing his cross to Calvary, she joins the godly women and weeps with them; for, indeed, there is true cause for grief— cause lying deeper than those mourning women thought. They bewailed innocence maltreated, goodness persecuted, love bleeding, meekness about to die; but my heart has a deeper and more bitter cause to mourn. My sins were the scourges which lacerated those blessed shoulders, and crowned with thorn those bleeding brows: my sins cried "Crucify him! crucify him!" and laid the cross upon his gracious shoulders. His being led forth to die is sorrow enough for one eternity: but my having been his murderer, is more, infinitely more, grief than one poor fountain of tears can express.

   Why those women loved and wept it were not hard to guess: but they could not have had greater reasons for love and grief than my heart has. Nain’s widow saw her son restored—but I myself have been raised to newness of life. Peter’s wife’s mother was cured of the fever—but I of the greater plague of sin. Out of Magdalene seven devils were cast—but a whole legion out of me. Mary and Martha were favoured with visits—but he dwells with me. His mother bare his body—but he is formed in me the hope of glory. In nothing behind the holy women in debt, let me not be behind them in gratitude or sorrow.

Love and grief my heart dividing,
With my tears his feet I’ll lave—
Constant still in heart abiding,
Weep for him who died to save.

 


Posted by admin on Monday, April 09 @ 01:00:00 EDT (1223 reads)
(Read More... | 477 comments | Score: 0)

 April 8 -Morning C. H. Spurgeon Morning and Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 8-Morning  Daily Reading: 1Sa 22:1-24:22 Quick Study: #1Sa 30:1-31:13


"If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?" Lu 23:31
 

   Among other interpretations of this suggestive question, the following is full of teaching: "If the innocent substitute for sinners, suffer thus, what will be done when the sinner himself —the dry tree—shall fall into the hands of an angry God?" When God saw Jesus in the sinner’s place, he did not spare him; and when he finds the unregenerate without Christ, he will not spare them. O sinner, Jesus was led away by his enemies: so shall you be dragged away by fiends to the place appointed for you. Jesus was deserted of God; and if he, who was only imputedly a sinner, was deserted, how much more shall you be? "Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?" what an awful shriek! But what shall be your cry when you shall say, "Oh God! O God! why hast thou forsaken me?" and the answer shall come back, "Because ye have set at nought all my counsel, and would none of my reproof: I also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear cometh." If God spared not his own Son, how much less will he spare you! What whips of burning wire will be yours when conscience shall smite you with all its terrors. Ye richest, ye merriest, ye most self-righteous sinners—who would stand in your place when God shall say, "Awake, O sword, against the man that rejected me; smite him, and let him feel the smart for ever?" Jesus was spit upon: sinner, what shame will be yours! We cannot sum up in one word all the mass of sorrows which met upon the head of Jesus who died for us, therefore it is impossible for us to tell you what streams, what oceans of grief must roll over your spirit if you die as you now are. You may die so, you may die now. By the agonies of Christ, by his wounds and by his blood, do not bring upon yourselves the wrath to come! Trust in the Son of God, and you shall never die.




Posted by admin on Sunday, April 08 @ 01:00:00 EDT (1123 reads)
(Read More... | 459 comments | Score: 0)

 April 7-Evening C. H. Spurgeon Morning and Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 7-Evening

"Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation; and my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness." Psalms 51:14


   In this SOLEMN CONFESSION, it is pleasing to observe that David plainly names his sin. He does not call it manslaughter, nor speak of it as an imprudence by which an unfortunate accident occurred to a worthy man, but he calls it by its true name, bloodguiltiness. He did not actually kill the husband of Bathsheba; but still it was planned in David’s heart that Uriah should be slain, and he was before the Lord his murderer. Learn in confession to be honest with God. Do not give fair names to foul sins; call them what you will, they will smell no sweeter. What God sees them to be, that do you labour to feel them to be; and with all openness of heart acknowledge their real character. Observe, that David was evidently oppressed with the heinousness of his sin. It is easy to use words, but it is difficult to feel their meaning. The fifty first Psalm is the photograph of a contrite spirit. Let us seek after the like brokenness of heart; for however excellent our words may be, if our heart is not conscious of the hell deservingness of sin, we cannot expect to find forgiveness.


   Our text has in it AN EARNEST PRAYER—it is addressed to the God of salvation. It is his prerogative to forgive; it is his very name and office to save those who seek his face. Better still, the text calls him the God of my salvation. Yes, blessed be his name, while I am yet going to him through Jesus’ blood, I can rejoice in the God of my salvation.


   The psalmist ends with A COMMENDABLE VOW: if God will deliver him he will sing—nay, more, he will "sing aloud." Who can sing in any other style of such a mercy as this! But note the subject of the song—"THY RIGHTEOUSNESS." We must sing of the finished work of a precious Saviour; and he who knows most of forgiving love will sing the loudest.




Posted by admin on Saturday, April 07 @ 16:00:00 EDT (6772 reads)
(Read More... | 5972 comments | Score: 0)

 April 7-Morning C. H. Spurgeon Morning & Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 7-Morning  {Daily Reading: #1Sa 19:1-21:15} {Quick Study: #1Sa 28:1-29:11}


"Oh ye sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame?" {#Ps 4:2}

   An instructive writer has made a mournful list of the honours which the blinded people of Israel awarded to their long expected King.


1. They gave him a procession of honour, in which Roman legionaries, Jewish priests, men and women, took a part, he himself bearing his cross. This is the triumph which the world awards to him who comes to overthrow man’s direst foes. Derisive shouts are his only acclamations, and cruel taunts his only paeans of praise.


2. They presented him with the wine of honour. Instead of a golden cup of generous wine they offered him the criminal’s stupefying death draught, which he refused because he would preserve an uninjured taste wherewith to taste of death; and afterwards when he cried, "I thirst," they gave him vinegar mixed with gall, thrust to his mouth upon a sponge. O! wretched, detestable inhospitality to the King’s Son.


3. He was provided with a guard of honour, who showed their esteem of him by gambling over his garments, which they had seized as their booty. Such was the bodyguard of the adored of heaven; a quaternion of brutal gamblers.


4. A throne of honour was found for him upon the bloody tree; no easier place of rest would rebel men yield to their liege Lord.  The cross was, in fact, the full expression of the world’s feeling towards him; "There," they seemed to say, "thou Son of God, this is the manner in which God himself should be treated, could we reach him."


5. The title of honour was nominally "King of the Jews," but that the blinded nation distinctly repudiated, and really called him "King of thieves," by preferring Barabbas, and by placing Jesus in the place of highest shame between two thieves. His glory was thus in all things turned into shame by the sons of men, but it shall yet gladden the eyes of saints and angels, world without end.



Posted by admin on Saturday, April 07 @ 01:00:00 EDT (854 reads)
(Read More... | 454 comments | Score: 0)

 April 6-Evening C. H. Spurgeon Morning & Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 6-Evening

"In the name of the Lord I will destroy them." {#Ps 118:12}

   Our Lord Jesus, by his death, did not purchase a right to a part of us only, but to the entire man. He contemplated in his passion the sanctification of us wholly, spirit, soul, and body; that in this triple kingdom he himself might reign supreme without a rival. It is the business of the newborn nature which God has given to the regenerate to assert the rights of the Lord Jesus Christ. My soul, so far as thou art a child of God, thou must conquer all the rest of thyself which yet remains unblest; thou must subdue all thy powers and passions to the silver sceptre of Jesus’ gracious reign, and thou must never be satisfied till he who is King by purchase becomes also King by gracious coronation, and reigns in thee supreme. Seeing, then, that sin has no right to any part of us, we go about a good and lawful warfare when we seek, in the name of God, to drive it out. O my body, thou art a member of Christ: shall I tolerate thy subjection to the prince of darkness? O my soul, Christ has suffered for thy sins, and redeemed thee with his most precious blood: shall I suffer thy memory to become a storehouse of evil, or thy passions to be firebrands of iniquity? Shall I surrender my judgment to be perverted by error, or my will to be led in fetters of iniquity? No, my soul, thou art Christ’s, and sin hath no right to thee.
 

   Be courageous concerning this, O Christian! be not dispirited, as though your spiritual enemies could never be destroyed. You are able to overcome them—not in your own strength—the weakest of them would be too much for you in that; but you can and shall overcome them through the blood of the Lamb. Do not ask, "How shall I dispossess them, for they are greater and mightier than I?" but go to the strong for strength, wait humbly upon God, and the mighty God of Jacob will surely come to the rescue, and you shall sing of victory through his grace.


Posted by admin on Friday, April 06 @ 16:30:00 EDT (1149 reads)
(Read More... | 634 comments | Score: 0)

 April 6-Morning C. H. Spurgeon Morning & Evening Devotional

Daily Bread
April 6-Morning  Daily Reading: 1Sa 17:1-18:30 Quick Study: 1Sa 26:1-27:12

"Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp." Heb 13:13

   Jesus, bearing his cross, went forth to suffer without the gate. The Christian’s reason for leaving the camp of the world’s sin and religion is not because he loves to be singular, but because Jesus did so; and the disciple must follow his Master. Christ was "not of the world:" his life and his testimony were a constant protest against conformity with the world. Never was such overflowing affection for men as you find in him; but still he was separate from sinners. In like manner Christ’s people must "go forth unto him." They must take their position "without the camp," as witness bearers for the truth. They must be prepared to tread the straight and narrow path. They must have bold, unflinching, lion like hearts, loving Christ first, and his truth next, and Christ and his truth beyond all the world. Jesus would have his people "go forth without the camp" for their own sanctification. You cannot grow in grace to any high degree while you are conformed to the world. The life of separation may be a path of sorrow, but it is the highway of safety; and though the separated life may cost you many pangs, and make every day a battle, yet it is a happy life after all. No joy can excel that of the soldier of Christ: Jesus reveals himself so graciously, and gives such sweet refreshment, that the warrior feels more calm and peace in his daily strife than others in their hours of rest. The highway of holiness is the highway of communion. It is thus we shall hope to win the crown if we are enabled by divine grace faithfully to follow Christ "without the camp." The crown of glory will follow the cross of separation. A moment’s shame will be well recompensed by eternal honour; a little while of witness bearing will seem nothing when we are "for ever with the Lord.


Posted by admin on Friday, April 06 @ 11:22:50 EDT (1790 reads)
(Read More... | 759 comments | Score: 0)

 What is Holy Week?

Daily BreadTheEpiscopalian writes "
Holy Week is the week in the Christian year preceding Easter.

Special days of the this week are:

Palm Sunday
     Jesus enters Jerusalem on a mule.

Holy Thursday
     The Last Supper is held.

Good Friday
     Jesus is crucified on the cross.

          The last seven verses of Jesus Christ

               Father, forgive them ... (Luke 23:34)
               This day you will be with me in paradise (Luke 23:43)
               Woman, behold your son ...(John 19:26-27)
               My God, my God ...(Matthew 27:46, Mark 15:34)
               I thirst. (John 19:28)
               It is finished! (John 19:30)
               Father into your hands ...(Luke 23:46)


Holy Saturday
     Jesus is placed in the tomb.


Easter Sunday
     The Resurrection - Jesus rises from the dead.

Until the next time we meet.
May our Lord and Saviour Jesus hold you, your family, and your loved ones safely in the palm of His hand.

Wayne Roznak
The Episcopalian
"

Posted by admin on Friday, April 06 @ 11:02:35 EDT (822 reads)
(Read More... | 443 comments | Score: 0)

 Prayer: A Short Q&A.

Daily BreadPrayer: A Short Q&A.
Prayer: A Short Q&A.


Q: What is prayer?

A: Prayer is a heart to heart conversation with God.


Q: How do I pray?

A: Open your mouth and speak to God respectfully and sincerely.


Q: Why isnt't he answering?

A: Are you listening? Do you recognize his answers or are you drowning Him out with your own expectations to an anwer?


Q: How to I hear God?

A: It takes time, prayer, meditation, discernment. Time alone with yourself, the word and the Holy Spirit. Practice.


Q:Time alone with the Holy Spirit?

A: Yes Jesus Christ sent the Holy Spirit to be with us always. To guide us and show us the way. We merely just have to ask the Holy Spirit to show what we must do and let the Holy Spirit work upon us.


Until the next time we meet,

May our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, hold you, your family , and loved ones, safely in the palm of His hand.


Wayne Roznak
The Episcopalian

Posted by admin on Friday, April 06 @ 10:31:17 EDT (730 reads)
(Read More... | 676 comments | Score: 0)


     Survey
What do you think about this site?

Ummmm, not bad
Cool
Terrific
The best one!
what the hell is this?



Results
Polls

Votes: 0
Comments: 5

     Login
Nickname

Password

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

     Big Story of Today
There isn't a Biggest Story for Today, yet.

     Old Articles
There isn't content right now for this block.

     Information

Powered by PHP-Nuke

Valid HTML 4.01!

Valid CSS!





Enter your copyright notice or anything that should display on every page. HTML is allowed.
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.58 Seconds