Kp Yohannan Quotes

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How many more cars, clothes, toys and trinkets do we really need before we wake up and realize that half the world goes to bed every night with empty stomachs and naked bodies?
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K.P. Yohannan (No Longer a Slumdog: Bringing Hope to Children in Crisis)
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I believe, as followers of Christ, we are commanded to reach out to the least of these in the name of Jesus and show them they matter a great deal to God, who sacrificed His only Son to reach them with His love.
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K.P. Yohannan (No Longer a Slumdog: Bringing Hope to Children in Crisis)
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In the human heart there is a built-in obsolescence factor. It does not matter how powerful and influential you are, how much education you have, how selfcontrolled or holy you consider yourselfβ€”your heart, if you do not guard it, will break down.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the Light of Eternity: Discovering God's Design for Your Life)
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Every truth in this world stretched beyond its limits will become a false doctrine.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the Light of Eternity: Discovering God's Design for Your Life)
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Beginning to sense his call to preach boldly in dangerous situations even though he was young and slight, the author agreed to go only if God would give him a particular sense of His presence. The next morning, the author says it was as if God took out his human eyes and replaced them with God's own because he saw other people so much more vividly.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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Lifting your eyes from the things of this world is an activity that must begin WHERE YOU ARE.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the Light of Eternity: Discovering God's Design for Your Life)
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Neglecting to bathe the ministry in prayer leaves us just workers, not worshipers. When we unite in prayer, there is incredible power.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the Light of Eternity: Discovering God's Design for Your Life)
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What will you do with your self? Many men and women are still in darkness, trying to figure out the meaning and purpose of life. But no matter what you try to do with your selfβ€” whether you deny it, obliterate it, annihilate it, accept it or express itβ€”believe me, it is still alive and kicking.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the light of eternity)
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God's word tells us that righteousness is a gift; it cannot be earned. But godliness is not a gift. We must pay a price to touch godliness through a daily decision to die to self and embrace the cross. God calls us to learn godliness in the classroom of life among people as we sit on airplanes and buses, walk among our neighbors and labor at our factories or desks.
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K.P. Yohannan (Touching Godliness)
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Yet so often it seems that victory eludes us. It is when our self-confidence is finally destroyed and is replaced with dependence upon God that we have victory.
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K.P. Yohannan (When We Have Failed-What Next?: God's Answer to Our Failures)
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The secret to following God's will, I discovered, usually is wrapped up in rejecting the good for God's best.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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With all the decision making in my life, I often have to pause, look up and remember God is the One working behind the scenes. I say to myself, β€œHe is able to work all things out for good. I just need to submit to Him and His ways. I can rest.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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The High Cost of Servanthood Jesus warned, however, that this life of servanthood is not lived without cost. He said, "The servant is not greater than his Lord" (John 13:16) and, if the persecuted and hated Him, we can expect no better treatment. In 2 Timothy 3:12 Paul wrote, " All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persectution," so this is also the cost we as servants must be willing to pay. This is so difficult for us to accept in our world of man-pleasing, "I'm OK, you're OK" Christianity. No one wants to be disliked, hated or misunderstood---especially by family, friends and loved ones. But this of often exactly the price to be paid by anyone seriously wanting to follow Jesus into a life of servanthood.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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Abortion is one of the most shocking, yet entirely logical, extensions of this obsession with comfort, convenience and luxury. Less dramatic, but just as deadly to millions of lost souls in our world, is our unwillingness to make even small sacrifices to reach them with the Gospel.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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When our flesh stops trying, when it is thoroughly crushed and broken, His purposes for our lives are unhindered, and we bring true glory to His name. First Peter 2:23 (NIV) tells us, β€œWhen they hurled their insults at [Jesus], he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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haven’t
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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No matter what Jesus faced, He lived by what He knew about Himself, not by what others thought or said about Him.
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K.P. Yohannan (Destined to Soar)
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Not one was willing to break out of that velvet cage of comfort and convenience to begin a radical lifestyle lived from an inner reality
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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come
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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Part of the sin of Pride is a subtle but deep racism.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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Americans are more than aware of their affluence- they almost seem to despise it at times.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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When we are broken like Jesus, we are able to forgive people, truly forgive them, and desire no revenge. A good example of this is found in the life of Joseph. When his brothers came to him desperate in the time of famine, he had every reason to turn them away and let them die. But he didn’t. He said, β€œMy brothers, don’t be afraid, the Lord sent me here for you” (see Genesis 45:5).
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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To look into the sad eyes of a hungry child or see the wasted life of a drug addict is to see only the evidence of Satan's hold on this world. All bad things, whether in Asia or America, are his handiwork.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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.....I felt other Christian charities and ministries of compassion were wrong in showing the love of Christ. No, many were doing a wonderful job. But I felt the local church should be the center for outreach, and we needed to bring the balance back.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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When we learn to run to it and embrace it, when we can plan habitually to go without things for Christ’s sake, then we’ve begun to live the life of reasonable service: β€œI beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service” (Romans 12:1).
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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Real Christians accept suffering as a normal part of following Christ, just as mothers accept labor as a normal part of delivering a baby. β€œNo pain, no gain” applies to world evangelism as well as exercise programs! Until we can accept suffering, sacrifice and self-denial as routine and normal, we will never see the Great Commission fulfilled in our generation.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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To expect to continue controlling the use of money and the ministry overseas from our foreign-based mission board is an extension of colonialism. It adds an unbiblical element, which only humiliates and weakens the national missionaries in the long run. Christians need to learn that they are not giving their money to national workers, but God's money to His work overseas.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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A friend in Dallas recently pointed out a new church building that cost $74 million. While this thought was still exploding in my mind, he pointed out another $7 million church building going up less than a minute away. These extravagant buildings are insanity from a Two-Thirds World perspective. The $74 million spent on one new building in the United States could build more than 6,000 average-sized churches in India. The same $74 million would be enough to guarantee that the Good News of Jesus Christ could be proclaimed to a whole Indian state-or even some of the smaller countries of Asia.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution In World Missions)
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We celebrate the dedication of Olympic athletes who diet and train and exercise daily for years in order to prepare for the games. They give up not only physical comfort but also any hope of a normal social and family life. When police officers or firefighters die, often thousands turn out for their funerals. We honor our children who die in military service in much the same wayβ€”often arranging public ceremonies and holidays. We expect television celebrities such as actors, news correspondents and musicians to sacrifice any kind of normal life in order to entertain us around the clockβ€”and they are paid millions of dollars to do so. The names of astronauts become household words because they risk their lives in order to forward the conquest of space. But the minute a Christian young person starts to fast and pray, consider the mission field or give up career or romance for Christβ€”concerned counselors, family and friends will spend hours trying to keep him or her from β€œgoing off the deep end on this religious stuff.” Even devout Christian parents will oppose Christian service when their own son or daughter is about to give up all for Christ. Discipline, pain, sacrifice and suffering are rewarded with fame and fortune in the world. Why then do we refuse to accept it as a normal part of giving spiritual birth in the kingdom of our Lord?
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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But there is a dark and deadly side to this fascination with comfort and convenience. Among the developed nations, every 5 seconds the life of an unborn child is snuffed out through abortion.[1] The reason usually given? β€œWe’re just not ready to have a baby now.” Translated into plain English, this means that having the baby would be too inconvenient. If a new human life should happen to get in the way of our career and income goals, school schedules or marriage plans, the first choice is ruthless and simple: kill it. Nothing is allowed to get in the way of feeling good. Abortion is one of the most shocking, yet entirely logical, extensions of this obsession with comfort, convenience and luxury.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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If he is willing to come and clean the toilets, be a nobody, he may come. But since he already is demanding a position and looking for a great title, it would be best if he stays where he is. Please tell him not to come.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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The way to have God near to you is to be humble and broken. As long as we are stubborn and hard and unbending, He will be far from us.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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All of this beauty comes because we are broken. We no longer have anything to fight for because our lives have been crucified with Christ. We no longer have anything to boast in because our outer man is crushed, our strength is done away with, our reputation insignificant. It is only Christ within us that matters now. And it is only Christ within us, in all His beauty and grace, who can be seen now. His living water is free to flow out of us and bless others.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Beauty of Christ through Brokenness)
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As soon as fear replaces faith, God can no longer answer our prayers or fight on our behalf, because His promises will not work apart from faith.
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K.P. Yohannan
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There will come a time when each of us and the ministry the Lord gave us to do on this earth will be tested by fire (see 1 Corinthians 3:13). Only that ministry which was done in His way will last. It does not matter what it may have looked like on this earth, it does not matter how well-known it may have been or how much fruit it may have seemed to produce. If it was not done as unto Him, it was not done in His way ... and it will not stand in eternity. My brothers
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K.P. Yohannan (The Lord's Work Done in the Lord's Way)
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I know for our ministry, the need is absolutely huge, mind-boggling. We need to get the Gospel to so many people before they die and are lost for eternity. So it is logical and reasonable to be absolutely committed and fully involved in doing everything we possibly can to reach the lost. But if we do this independent of Him, our love for and intimacy with the Lord begin to fade away and our ministry cannot be pleasing to Him, no matter what kind of fruit it is producing. As a ministry,
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K.P. Yohannan (The Lord's Work Done in the Lord's Way)
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We must live according to what we know from Scripture, committed to a heavenly kingdom, so that our lives affect not only our home and community, and perhaps our state and countryβ€”but also the entire earth.
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K.P. Yohannan (Living in the Light of Eternity: How to Make the Only Difference That Matters)
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The whole message God wants to tell us is that if we want to experience God, we must first abandon our thoughts and then start thinking His.
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K.P. Yohannan (Destined to Soar)
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Jesus found His identity in Scripture and always directed these people to the Scriptures and the prophecies that spoke of Him.
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K.P. Yohannan (Destined to Soar)
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gets up very early each morning and spends two or three hours in prayer and then an hour or two reading the Bible.
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K.P. Yohannan (Learning to Pray)
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This is the first time our power did not work,' [the witch doctors] told him. 'After doing the pujas, we asked the spirits to go and kill your family. But the spirits came back and told us they could not approach you or your family because you were always surrounded by fire. Then we called more powerful spirits to come after you--but they too returned, saying not only were you surrounded by fire, but angels were also around you all the time.' Jesu Das told them about Christ.
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K.P. Yohannan (Revolution in World Missions)
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just the thought of some temporary discomfort was enough to keep him from the spiritual adventure of a lifetime.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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We will never come to the place of being holy enough for God to hear our prayer. Rather, we stand before the Lord pure, transparent and righteous because it is a gift He has given us through His Son. It is not something we can earn. We are the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. It is nothing we attain. It is only by grace that we are children of God.
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K.P. Yohannan (Learning to Pray)
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We could read every book even written on prayer, but that won't make us people of prayer. We learn to pray by doing it.
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K.P. Yohannan (Learning to Pray)
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I have traveled millions of miles, speaking to Christians. I have counseled privately with hundreds of them about their beliefs and lifestyles. What I have found has to be one of the most tragic ironies of all time: A tiny group of believers who have the Gospel keep mumbling it over and over to themselves. Meanwhile, millions who have never heard it once fall into the flames of eternal hell without ever hearing the salvation story.
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K.P. Yohannan (The Road to Reality: Coming Home to Jesus from the Unreal World)
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When we live in rebellion, He can't bless us as He would like.
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K.P. Yohannan (Touching Godliness)
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When we give away our rights and surrender our wills, when we give our obedience, our return is "good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over.
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K.P. Yohannan (Touching Godliness)
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submitting to authority is never for evil, but always for blessing.
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K.P. Yohannan (Touching Godliness)
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Prayer is waiting before Him and meditating long enough in His presence until our hearts are touched and moved with His concerns and burdens, so that we become channels for Him to work through.
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K.P. Yohannan (Learning to Pray)
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Study Guide for Chapter 1 The Way to Freedom Overview Everything around us operates on the principle of submission, and to the extent that submission is heeded, to the same extent that way is prospered. Submission is a choice toward life. Adam chose death, and we are born into this curse. Submission to God includes submission to delegated authority.* It is out of God’s love for us that He asks us to submit. Authority is and flows from God Himself, and the principle of submission to authority is eternal, sacred and foundational.* Where is your heart? Are you fighting, or are you surrendered? Adam’s curse is broken as we surrender and choose the way of the cross as Christ did.* Just as Christ manifests absolute submission and surrender, Satan manifests absolute rebellion.* God created us to depend on Him, and only what is done in His Spirit will last. Through the mystery of submission to authority, God is restoring creation back to innocence. When we submit, we become part of that work.* * These topics are developed more fully in later chapters. Reflection and Action 1. Reflect on your day. Write down some of the many different ways you saw the principle of submission to authority at work in nature, in society and in your personal life. How might your day have been different if the response in each of those cases was defying submission? What was the result of submission in each of those cases? 2. Note each time that the words β€œchoice” or β€œchoose” were used in this chapter. What are we choosing between? And what is the outcome of the choices made? In the Garden of Eden, what did the two trees represent? What was God’s purpose in allowing Adam and Eve to choose between them? Can you recall an incident recently in which you were faced with the same kind of choice? How did you respond? 3. Prayerfully review all of the Scripture passages related to submission within the Trinity itself. How does this glimpse into the very heart of God change the way you think about submission? Meditate on Isaiah 43:10–11. How would you explain to someone else the concept of God and authority? Why is this principle so important and holy? 4. It can be painful to admit, even to ourselves, that we may imitate Lucifer, rather than Christ, in our attitude toward authority. However, by allowing God to reveal truth to us, we are taking our first steps toward godliness. With that perspective, review these questions from the text and ask the Lord to speak to you through them in any way He chooses. 5. What are the reasons why we find it difficult to submit to authority? And how is it possible for us to remain in rebellion for years after having received Jesus as our Savior? Write down specific times you can look back and see how you remained in rebellion. How would you want to handle those times now? 6. The author writes: β€œNothing will remain in eternity that is not of the Spirit.” Explain what this means to you and how it applies to your own ministry. 7. What does God want to accomplish through giving us the freedom to choose submission? Write down any changes in your thoughts and attitude toward submission as you’ve studied this chapter. Close your time by thanking God for His kindness to open your eyes to the things He showed you through this chapter.
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K.P. Yohannan (Touching Godliness)