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Helping people is the action step that unlocks knowledge of the will of the Lord. The circumstances about which we are concerned have people in them. In fact, the key to solving our circumstances is being the Lord's person to the people in those circumstances. Few of the questions we have about guidance are purely personal, unrelated to others.
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (God's Will in Your Life)
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Our personal relationship with the Savior will re-create us in His image. He is to be our purpose and passion. We are to long to know Him better and make Him known to others.
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (Autobiography of God: Discover the Extravagant Love of God)
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Love must correct.
Lloyd John Ogilvie writes, "Affirmation of people does not have to mean advocacy for their wrongful lifestyle or behavior." Affirmation labors to earn a platform from which to challenge wrongful lifestyles and be heard in doing so. "The Holy Spirit does not counsel us to have a flabby, indulgent attitude. Nor does He encourage us to buy into our age of appeasement and tolerance where everything is relative and there are no absolutes. However, the Holy Spirit shows us that any judgment of people's infractions of these absolutes must be done with indefatigable love and willingness to help them.
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Sam Crabtree (Practicing Affirmation: God-Centered Praise of Those Who Are Not God)
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All too frequently we take a different view of our trials and temptations. We tend to see them as isolated nightmares. God, however, sees them from a different perspective. They are important and connected punctuation marks in the biography of grace He is writing in our lives. They give formation, direction, and character to our lives. They are all part of the tapestry He is weaving in history. He uses them to build up our strength and to prepare us to surmount greater obstacles, perhaps fiercer temptations.
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 21: Daniel)
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What a scathing exposure! It was as if Jesus said, βListen, you say you want God, but your actions and words expose that you donβt. You talk about Godβs judgment, but you did not willingly accept one who proclaimed it and called all of you to repentance. You say you long for the Messiah to come, but when He is here you search for reasons to reject Him. You are childish! If you had the wisdom of God, you would recognize His truth in the messenger sent to prepare the way for the Messiah and in the Messiah Himself. You have developed the miserable sickness of religious pretense and no longer desire what you prattle about aimlessly in what you pretend is prayer!
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (Autobiography of God: Discover the Extravagant Love of God)
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Jesusβ mood is determined and decisive: He is on the way to Jerusalem, and He wants followers who can count the cost. The three different levels of commitment shown in people He met expose the ways many Christians relate to their discipleship today. The first man made a grand, pious commitment that went no deeper than words. He promised to follow the Master wherever He went. Jesus challenged the man to count the cost. So often we come to Christ to receive what we want to solve problems or gain inspiration for our challenges. He gives both with abundance, but then calls us into a ministry of concern and caring. We are to do for others what He has done for us. Loving and forgiving are not always easy. The second man had unfinished business from the past. He wanted to follow Christ, but a secondary loyalty kept him tied to the past. In substance, Christ said, βForget the past; follow Me!β The third person wanted to say goodbye to his family. Jesus stresses the urgency of our commitment. Our commitment must be unreserved to seek first His kingdom. Are there entangling loyalties you have brought into
the Christian life that make it difficult to give your
whole mind and heart and will to Christ?
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (God's Best for My Life: A Classic Daily Devotional)
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Think about our judgments that create the anxiety of never measuring up to what we demand. Consider the subtle pressure by which we communicate standards of what we want people to be, rather than affirmation of what they actually are. Have we taken time to help people discover a motive to do the things we press on them? Are we creating people in our image of them, or are we helping them to discover their true selves and potential? Is our love quietly conditioned on their performance? Are they free to fail and begin again without incrimination?
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (God's Best for My Life: A Classic Daily Devotional)
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When we drift from a deep, intimate companionship with God, we become negative, critical, judgmental and recalcitrant. We resist the repeated overtures of Godβs love. Neutrality and detached aloofness eventually result. We become respectably unresponsive. It happens to all of us at times. The telltale signs are equivocation, vacillation and pretense.
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (Autobiography of God: Discover the Extravagant Love of God)
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Now the parable takes on a very personal focus. We can no longer enjoy observation without participation. We are part of the drama that is staged in this parable. Jesus came. What have we done with the truth of His message and the gift of His forgiving death?
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (Autobiography of God: Discover the Extravagant Love of God)
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The parable challenges us to clarify and claim our purpose and live it with absolute earnestness. Our ultimate purpose is Jesus Christ: to know Him, allow Him to love us, love Him in response, and love others as He has loved us. Each of us is called to live out that purpose in the unique circumstances and opportunities of our individual lives. That will mean several crucial things:
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (Autobiography of God: Discover the Extravagant Love of God)
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is our problem also. So seldom do we learn from past mistakes. We fail to trust God, we get into trouble, and we miss what the mistake has to teach us. We all have compulsive, repetitive patterns that get us into the same old problems again and again. The Lord wants to change that. We can overcome the past, not repeat it. December 12 Heresickness Job 36:1-33 Elihu continued and said, βWait for me a little, and I will show you that there is yet more to be said in Godβs behalf.
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Lloyd John Ogilvie (God's Best for My Life: A Classic Daily Devotional)
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we see the eternal through the particular; only by entering fully into our particular place can we participate in the Great Economy of God.
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Mark R. Rigg (Preaching in Place: Wendell Berry and the Agrarian Sermon (Lloyd John Ogilvie Institute of Preaching Series))
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Where is the one who has been born king of the Jews? It ought to be an easy question, but it is not. One of the reasons finding the true king is hard is that so many of the strongest candidates look alike. Herod the Great. Herod Antipas. Caesar Augustus. Caesar Tiberius. Of course they are all unique individuals with their own strengths and weaknesses. But they have more in common than they have differences. Their lives are about power, about ambition, about glory and making a name for themselves. They are all in the 1 percent, and they ultimately all seek to be rulers in the same kingdomβthe kingdom of the world.
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Mark R. Rigg (Preaching in Place: Wendell Berry and the Agrarian Sermon (Lloyd John Ogilvie Institute of Preaching Series))