UNDERNEATH ARE THE EVERLASTING ARSM!

This is borrowed from someone else!

“Underneath are the everlasting arms.”

Deuteronomy 33:27

God—the eternal God—is himself our support at all times, and especially when we are sinking in deep trouble.

There are seasons when the Christian sinks very low in humiliation.

Under a deep sense of his great sinfulness, he is humbled before God till he scarcely knows how to pray,

because he appears, in his own sight, so worthless.

Well, child of God, remember that when thou art at thy worst and lowest, yet “underneath” thee “are everlasting arms.”

Sin may drag thee ever so low, but Christ’s great atonement is still under all.

You may have descended into the deeps, but you cannot have fallen so low as “the uttermost;” and to the uttermost he saves.

Again, the Christian sometimes sinks very deeply in sore trial from without.

Every earthly prop is cut away.

What then?

Still underneath him are “the everlasting arms.”

He cannot fall so deep in distress and affliction but what the covenant grace of an ever-faithful God will still encircle him.

The Christian may be sinking under trouble from within through fierce conflict,

but even then he cannot be brought so low as to be beyond the reach of the “everlasting arms”—they are underneath him;

and, while thus sustained, all Satan’s efforts to harm him avail nothing.

This assurance of support is a comfort to any weary but earnest worker in the service of God.

It implies a promise of strength for each day,

grace for each need,

and power for each duty.

And, further, when death comes, the promise shall still hold good.

When we stand in the midst of Jordan, we shall be able to say with David,

“I will fear no evil, for thou art with me.”

We shall descend into the grave, but we shall go no lower,

for the eternal arms prevent our further fall.

All through life, and at its close, we shall be upheld by the “everlasting arms”—arms that neither flag nor lose their strength, for “the everlasting God fainteth not, neither is weary.”

JUDAS

This is just the first writing of my thoughts of Judas making it to HEAVEN. I will expound on my thoughts and details in the next Blog Post!!

I honestly believe these two scriptures prove that without a doubt that Judas is in HEAVEN. God woke me up at 2:30 and my Bible reading took me directly to Matthew and when I read this, I could not believe that I had missed read this verse so many times. 

A feeling of refreshing joy flowed over me as I read this repeatedly.

Brother what all are we missing in the Holy Word of God, and we read it every day??

Luke 22:28-30

Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations. that ye may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom and sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel. And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me.

Matthew 27:2-4 And when they had bound him, they led him away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the governor. Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood. And they said, what is that to us

WALK WITH HIM

“So walk ye in him.”

Colossians 2:6

If we have received Christ himself in our inmost hearts, our new life will manifest its intimate acquaintance with him by a walk of faith in him.

Walking implies action. Our religion is not to be confined to our closet; we must carry out into practical effect that which we believe.

If a man walks in Christ, then he so acts as Christ would act; for Christ being in him,

his hope,

his love,

his joy,

his life,

he is the reflex of the image of Jesus; and men say of that man,

“He is like his Master; he lives like Jesus Christ.

“Walking signifies progress. “So walk ye in him”; proceed from grace to grace, run forward until you reach the uttermost degree of knowledge that a man can attain concerning our Beloved.

Walking implies continuance. There must be a perpetual abiding in Christ.

How many Christians think that in the morning and evening they ought to come into the company of Jesus, and may then give their hearts to the world all the day:

but this is poor living; we should always be with him, treading in his steps and doing his will.

Walking also implies habit. When we speak of a man’s walk and conversation, we mean his habits, the constant tenor of his life.

Now, if we sometimes enjoy Christ, and then forget him; sometimes call him ours, and anon lose our hold, that is not a habit; we do not walk in him.

We must keep to him,

cling to him,

never let him go,

but live and have our being in him.

“As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord,

so walk ye in him”;

persevere in the same way in which ye have begun,

and, as at the first Christ Jesus was the trust of your faith,

the source of your life,

the principle of your action,

and the joy of your spirit,

so let him be the same till life’s end;

the same when you walk through the valley of the shadow of death, and enter into the joy and the rest which remain for the people of God.

O Holy Spirit, enable us to obey this heavenly precept.

ACTUALLY IN THE HANDS of GOD

“Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands.”

Isaiah 49:16

No doubt a part of the wonder which is concentrated in the word “Behold,” is excited by the unbelieving lamentation of the preceding sentence.

Zion said, “The Lord hath forsaken me, and my God hath forgotten me.”

How amazed the divine mind seems to be at this wicked unbelief!

What can be more astounding than the unfounded doubts and fears of God’s favoured people?

The Lord’s loving word of rebuke should make us blush;

he cries,

“How can I have forgotten thee, when I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands?

How darest thou doubt my constant remembrance,

when the memorial is set upon my very flesh?”

O unbelief, how strange a marvel thou art!

We know not which most to wonder at, the faithfulness of God or the unbelief of his people.

He keeps his promise a thousand times, and yet the next trial makes us doubt him.

He never faileth;

he is never a dry well;

he is never as a setting sun,

a passing meteor,

or a melting vapour;

and yet we are as continually vexed with anxieties,

molested with suspicions,

and disturbed with fears, as if our God were the mirage of the desert.

“Behold,” is a word intended to excite admiration.

Here, indeed, we have a theme for marvelling.

Heaven and earth may well be astonished that rebels should obtain so great a nearness to the heart of infinite love as to be written upon the palms of his hands.

“I have graven thee.”

It does not say, “Thy name.”

The name is there, but that is not all: “I have graven thee.”

See the fulness of this!

I have graven thy person,

thine image,

thy case,

thy circumstances,

thy sins,

thy temptations,

thy weaknesses,

thy wants,

thy works;

I have graven thee,

everything about thee,

all that concerns thee;

I have put thee altogether there.

Wilt thou ever say again that thy God hath forsaken thee when he has graven thee upon his own palms?

PERFECT IN WEAKNESS

“For my strength is made perfect in weakness.”

2 Corinthians 12:9

A primary qualification for serving God with any amount of success, and for doing God’s work well and triumphantly, is a sense of our own weakness. 

When God’s warrior marches forth to battle, strong in his own might, when he boasts, “I know that I shall conquer, my own right arm and my conquering sword shall get unto me the victory,” defeat is not far distant.

 God will not go forth with that man who marches in his own strength. 

They who go forth to fight, boasting of their prowess, shall return with their gay banners trailed in the dust, and their armor stained with disgrace.

He who reckoneth on victory thus has reckoned wrongly, for “it is not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.” 

 Those who serve God must serve him in his own way, and in his strength, or he will never accept their service. That which man doth, unaided by divine strength, God can never own.

 The mere fruits of the earth he casteth away; he will only reap that corn, the seed of which was sown from heaven, watered by grace, and ripened by the sun of divine love. 

God will empty out all that thou hast before he will put his own into thee; he will first clean out thy granaries before he will fill them with the finest of the wheat. 

The river of God is full of water; but not one drop of it flows from earthly springs. 

God will have no strength used in his battles but the strength which he himself imparts. 

Are you mourning over your own weakness? 

Take courage, for there must be a consciousness of weakness before the Lord will give thee victory. 

Your emptiness is but the preparation for your being filled, and your casting down is but the making ready for your lifting up.

“When I am weak then am I strong,

Grace is my shield and Christ my song.”

Known-Unknown

Exodus 16:3

For the children of Israel said to them, Oh that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh [b]pots, when we ate bread our bellies full: for ye have brought us out into this wilderness, to kill this whole company with famine.

Were they really without food?