Knowing God
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Read between December 12 - December 28, 2017
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When Paul says, “the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us” (Rom 5:5 KJV), he means not love for God, as Augustine thought, but knowledge of God’s love for us. And though he had never met the Roman Christians to whom he was writing, he took it for granted that the statement would be as true of them as it was of him. A Flood of Love Three points in Paul’s words deserve comment. First, notice the verb shed abroad. It means literally poured (or dumped) out. It is the word used of the “outpouring” of the Spirit himself in Acts 2:17-18, 33; 10:45; Titus ...more
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People say they believe in God, but they have no idea who it is that they believe in, or what difference believing in him may make.
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the first thing to ask of any Scripture is not what it tells me about myself, but what it says about my God.
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I am not the center of things, but God is, and that I as his creature and child exist for him rather than he for me.
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I can thankfully say that in Knowing God, as in my earlier writings, I find nothing I wish to withdraw. In fact, I get help from rereading it,